Tuesday, 30 December 2014

Chinua Achebe was the man who rediscovered Africa


After William Heinemann overcame their reservations and published “Things Fall Apart” in June 1958, it became a critical success. Achebe, the Times Literary Supplement wrote, had “genuinely succeeded in presenting tribal life from the inside.” A novelty indeed. “Things Fall Apart” was pioneering not in its subject but in its African point of view, as there were already many well-regarded books about Africans written by non-Africans; tribal life had already been endlessly portrayed from the outside. Achebe himself first read some of the better-known examples of these “colonialism classics” as a secondary school student in the 1940s. “I did not see myself as an African to begin with,” he has written about his response to the African characters. “I took sides with the white men against the savages. The white man was good and reasonable and intelligent and courageous. The savages arrayed against him were sinister and stupid or, at the most, cunning. I hated their guts.” As Achebe matured and became more critical in his reading, he began to understand the enormous power that stories had, and how much this power was shaped by who told the stories and by how they were told. As a university student in the 1950s, in addition to reading Wordsworth, Shakespeare and Coleridge, Achebe also read Joyce Carey’s “Mister Johnson,” a novel set in Nigeria, which Time magazine had named the “best book ever written about Africa.” Achebe disagreed. Not only was the Nigerian character in the novel unrecognizable to him and his classmates but he also detected, in the description of Nigerians, “an undertow of uncharitableness … a contagion of distaste, hatred, and mockery.”
There has been much written about Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart” as a response to Mister Johnson, and one likes to think that Achebe would have written his novel even if he had not read Cary’s. Still, the prejudiced representation of African characters in literature could not but have had an influence on Achebe’s development as a writer. He would, years later, write a famous essay about the portrayal of Africans in Joseph Conrad’s classic novel “Heart of Darkness,” arguing not that Conrad should not have written honestly about the racism of the time, but that Conrad failed to hold an authorial rejection of that worldview.
The strangeness of seeing oneself distorted in literature – and indeed of not seeing oneself at all – was part of my own childhood. I grew up in the Nigerian university town of Nsukka in the 1980s, reading a lot of British children’s books. My early writing mimicked the books I was reading: all my characters were white and all my stories were set in England. Then I read “Things Fall Apart.” It was a glorious shock of discovery, as was “Arrow of God,” which I read shortly afterwards; I did not know in a concrete way until then that people like me could exist in literature. Here was a book that was unapologetically African, that was achingly familiar, but that was, also, exotic because it detailed the life of my people a hundred years before. Because I was educated in a Nigerian system that taught me little of my pre-colonial past, because I could not, for example, imagine with any accuracy how life had been organized in my part of the world in 1890, Achebe’s novels became strangely personal. “Things Fall Apart” was no longer a novel about a man whose exaggerated masculinity and encompassing fear of weakness make it impossible for him to adapt to the changes in his society, it became the life my great-grandfather might have lived. “Arrow of God” was no longer just about the British administration’s creation of warrant chiefs, and the linked destinies of two men – one an Igbo priest the other a British administrator – it became the story of my ancestral hometown during my grandfather’s time. “And No Longer at Ease” transcended the story of an educated young Nigerian struggling with the pressure of new urban expectations in Lagos, and became the story of my father’s generation.

Later, as an adult confronting the portrayals of Africa in non-African literature – Africa as a place without history, without humanity, without hope – and filled with that peculiar sense of defensiveness and vulnerability that comes with knowing that your humanity is seen as negotiable, I would turn again to Achebe’s novels. In the stark, sheer poetry of “Things Fall Apart,” in the humor and complexity of “Arrow of God,” I found a gentle reprimand: Don’t you dare believe other people’s stories of you.
Considering the time and circumstances under which he wrote, perhaps Chinua Achebe sensed that his work would become, for a generation of Africans, both literature and history. He has written that he would be satisfied if his novels did no more than teach his readers that their past “was not one long night of savagery from which the first Europeans acting on God’s behalf delivered them.” He has, on occasion, adopted a somewhat anthropological voice in his fiction: “Fortunately among these people,” we are told in “Things Fall Apart,” “a man was judged according to his worth and not according to the worth of his father.” But what is remarkable is that Achebe’s art never sinks under this burden of responsibility. A reader expecting to find simple answers in Chinua Achebe’s work will be disappointed, because he is a writer who embraces honesty and ambiguity and who complicates every situation. His criticism of the effects of colonialism on the Igbo is implicit, but so is his interrogation of the internal structure of Igbo society. When Nwoye, Okonkwo’s son in “Things Fall Apart,” breaks away from his family and community to join the Christians, it is a victory for the Europeans but also a victory for Nwoye, who finds peace and an outlet for deep disillusions he had long been nursing about his people’s traditions. When a character says, “The White man is very clever. He came quietly and peaceably with his religion. We were amused at his foolishness and allowed him to stay. Now he has won our brothers and our clan can no longer act as one. He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart,” the reader is aware that Achebe’s narrative is as much about the knife as it is about the vulnerabilities, the internal complexities, the cracks that already existed.
Achebe writes spare, elegant sentences in English but it is a Nigerian English and often, more specifically, an Igbo English. All three novels are filled with direct translations from the Igbo, resulting in expressions like “still carrying breakfast” and “what is called ‘the box is moving?’” as well as in laugh-out-loud lines, especially for an Igbo-speaking reader, like “the white man whose father or mother nobody knows.” It is, however, the rendition of proverbs, of speech, of manners of speaking, that elevate Achebe’s novels into a celebration of language. In “Arrow of God,” for example, Ezeulu eloquently captures his own cautious progressiveness when he tells his son whom he has decided to send to the missionary school: “I am like the bird eneke-nti-oba. When his friends asked him why he was always on the wing he replied: men of today have learnt to shoot without missing and so I have learnt to fly without perching…the world is like a Mask dancing. If you want to see it well you do not stand in one place.”
Achebe takes his characters seriously but not too seriously; he finds subtly subversive ways to question them and even laugh at them, and he refuses to rescue them from their foibles. Okonkwo, perhaps the best-known character in modern African writing in English, is the quintessential Strong Man, and is ruled by a profound fear that blinds him. His insecurities result in a relentless harshness and an extremist view of masculinity – he is so terrified of being thought weak that he destroys a person he loves and yet the reader empathizes with his remorse, repressed as it is.
It is impossible, especially for the contemporary reader, not to be struck by the portrayal of gender in “Things Fall Apart,” and the equating of weakness and inability with femaleness. More interesting, however, and perhaps more revealing, are the subtle ways in which Achebe interrogates this patriarchy: Okonkwo denigrates women and yet the child he most respects is his daughter Ezinma, the only character who dares to answer back to him and who happens to be confident and forthright in a way that his male children are not. My favorite part of the novel, and a small part indeed, is the love story of the old couple Ozoemena and Ndulue. When Ndulue dies, his wife Ozoemena goes to his hut to see his body and then goes into her own hut and is later found dead there. Okonkwo’s friend Obierika recalls, “It was always said that Ndulue and Ozoemena had one mind. I remember when I was a young boy and there was a song about them. He could not do anything without telling her.” This recollection troubles Okonkwo because, in his eyes, it casts doubts on Ndulue’s authentic masculinity. He says, “I thought he was a strong man in his youth.” The others agree that Ndulue was a strong man and had led the clan to war in those days. They do not see, as Okonkwo obviously does, a contradiction between the old man’s greatness in the realm of masculinity and his mutually dependent relationship with his wife.

It is this rigidity of Okonkwo’s, in addition to his uncompromising nature, his rashness, his excesses, for which the reader feels impatience. Yet, when placed in the context of the many small humiliations of the colonial encounter, his actions become worthy of empathy. The power structures of his society have been so easily overturned. Okonkwo is left struggling to understand a world in which the dignity he had always taken for granted has disappeared, in which elders are treated with scorn and he, proud warrior that he is, is flogged by agents of the District commissioner. The reader is moved to understand the helpless rage, and final violent actions, that are Okonkwo’s response to the enormous, and perhaps baffling, political and economic power that came with Christianity and Colonialism. We are left, in the end, with an unforgettable tragic character: a man who is gravely flawed but who has also been gravely wronged.

Ezeulu, the character at the center of “Arrow of God,” which remains my favorite novel is both flawed and wronged like Okonkwo, and is also held captive by what he imagines his society expects of him. Unlike Okonkwo, a character who was clearly in Achebe’s control, Ezeulu is wondrously unwieldy and his deep complexity lends “Arrow of God” much of its enduring power. I suspect that, as happens in the best fiction, Chinua Achebe did not have complete control over this character; ultimately the spirit of Ezeulu dictated how his story would be told. “Arrow of God” is told from the points of view of both Ezeulu and the British district commissioner Winterbottom; when the novel begins, the central event has already occurred, much like a Greek drama, and what Achebe explores is the aftermath. Ezeulu has testified against his own people in a land case with the neighboring town, because he is determined to speak the truth, and this action has earned him the respect of the district officer the as well as the ire of his local opponents. It will also act as a catalyst that – added to Ezeulu’s stubborness, his idealism, his pride – will contribute to his tragic end.
Like “Things Fall Apart,” “Arrow of God” shows the angry helplessness of people in the face of formalized European power: powerful men are treated with scorn by government agents, great men are flogged, the justice system is replaced by one the people do not understand and do not have a say in, and the internal dynamics of the society is turned around.

In “No Longer at Ease,” however, this helplessness is replaced by something inchoate but less suffocating, because the terms have changed during the short-lived optimism of independence. Obi, struggling with the pressures of the new Nigerian society, captures this change when he thinks of his boss the Englishman Mr. Green, who he is sure “loved Africa but only Africa of a certain kind: the Africa of Charles the messenger, the Africa of his gardenboy and stewardboy. In 1900 Mr Green might have ranked among the greatest missionaries, in 1935 he would have made do with slapping headmasters in the presence of their pupils, but in 1957 he could only curse and swear.”

Achebe writes in the realist tradition and there are often traces of the autobiographical in his work. He was born in 1930 in the Igbo town of Ogidi, southeastern Nigeria. His parents were firm Christians but many of his relatives had retained the Igbo religion and so he grew up a witness to both sides of his heritage and, more importantly, a recipient of stories from both. Influences of his great-uncle, a wealthy and important man who had allowed the first missionaries to stay in his compound but later asked them to leave because he found their music too sad, are obvious in “Things Fall Apart.” He worked as a radio producer in Lagos in the 1950s and the details of this life – film shows and clubs and bars, observing formerly expatriate clubs that were now admitting a few Nigerians – give “No Longer at Ease” its verisimilitude. It was through a radio program that Achebe heard the story of an Igbo priest in a nearby town who, as a result of a number of events with the British administration, had postponed the sacred New Yam festival, which had never been done before. He decided to go and visit this town and the story inspired “Arrow of God.”

All of Achebe’s work is, in some way, about strong communitarian values, the use of language as collective art, the central place of storytelling and the importance of symbolic acts and objects in keeping a community together. The American writer John Updike, after reading “Arrow of God,” wrote to Achebe to say that a western writer would not have allowed the destruction of a character as rich as Ezeulu. This is debatable, but perhaps what Updike had understood was that Achebe was as much concerned with a person as he was with a people, an idea well captured in the proverb that a character in Arrow of God recites: “An animal rubs its itching flank against a tree, but a man asks his kinsman to scratch him.”

By  Chimamanda Adichie, author of Half Of A Yellow Sun, Purple Hibiscus, and Americanah.


The Woman with the Story of Cancer

Picture from The Sentinel

The feeling to educate the world invoked her memoir book There’s Something I’ve Been Dying To Tell You. Of course, the title brings you into a state of motivation. You can hardly gaze away without trying to find out what it is all about. Actually, it is the true life story of Lynda Bellingham who was diagnosed with cancer.
Unarguably, there are numerous stories of diagnosed cancer in the world. But the story of Lynda Bellingham is so relevant, motivated, informative, educative and rarely.

In 2013 Lynda Bellingham was diagnosed with cancer. Sadly enough, she kept the details of her illness private. But the feeling to educate the world and the value of honesty extremely instigated her to write the story of her life since she was diagnosed, her family and how together they came to terms with a future they hadn’t planned. And how did Lynda become an intellectual writer at this time? It is in the fact that she stood up in literary term to spread her infectious warmth and humor bringing light to a very dark time.

According to her publisher, Lynda is described as, ‘Lynda Bellingham is a tremendously gifted storyteller with a rich collection of tales of love, loss and laughter and this book brings her kind heart, courage and emotion to the page in vivid detail. Lynda’s story is an affecting and at times heart-breaking one but it is so often laugh-out-loud too and ultimately the way Lynda tells her life story will serve as a great inspiration.’
Of course it is a great inspiration to read the story of Lynda. The Daily Telegraph described her as , ‘Her brilliantly titled book, There’s Something I’ve Been Dying to Tell You, charts the unravelling of that delusion, and her determination to wrest a meaningful life out of sudden chaos. By turns, it is riotous, deeply serious, practical and sad. Reading it is like being at her kitchen table with a glass of wine to hand. Not just listening to the expletives of pain or the dawning of reality, but rooting for her when the treatment appears to be working, sharing her fears as her life expectation dwindles, and rocking with laughter at the absurdities that go with having the “least sexy” cancer of them all. Her description of the mechanics of dealing with a stoma bag in the ladies’ at Buckingham Palace, when she accepted her OBE in March, reads like a comedy scrip.’

Biographical Notes
Lynda has enjoyed a career spanning forty five years. Her roles have covered drama as Helen Herriott in All Creatures Great and Small and comedy in her own series Faith in the Future, which won Best Comedy in 1998. She also managed to give us a twirl in Strictly Come Dancing and plenty of lip as a Loose Woman for six years. She created the role of Chris in the stage version of Calendar Girls and after a successful run in the West End went on to spend four years playing to full houses in a nationwide tour and she is still loved and remembered as the long-suffering mum in the OXO commercials. Lynda has previously written Lost and Found which was a Sunday Times bestseller and she has enjoyed bestselling success with her fiction writing too.Her real life family brings her great joy and she lives in north London with her youngest son, Robert, and her stepson Bradley, while her eldest son Michael lives just round the corner. She finally found true happiness with her husband Michael Pattemore and they were married in 2008 on her sixtieth birthday.

David Isoje

How George Orwell Captured Africa Politics In the 1940s


Eric Blair, globally recognized as George Orwell in the globe of literary, was a political literature writer, intellectual scribbler, a humanitarian critic and unprejudiced author. At the time of dire, he wrote the most stimulating and incisive articles in those years of totalitarianism, censuring the abusers in power, of maliciousness between power and the common citizens, opposing inequality and dehumanization. Of course, the world would never forget his sardonic book, Animal Farm.

Literature itself is an imperative subject. It is an art, a history, a religion, a philosophy, a humanity, and even politics. To comprehend the idea of literature, one cannot elude the three genres that comprise literature itself as a theme. These three genres – prose, drama, and poetry – have significant effects on humanity. Prose, which is the foremost aspect of reaching multiple readers, deals with fiction and nonfiction stories. It is written in a narrative technique. Drama, on the other hand, involves the dialogues between actors on stage, dramatizations and presentations. The stage that the actors stand for performance represents the world. While poetry, the third genre in this article, reflects or expresses the feelings of the writer. It is written in stanzas, lyrically, poetically and artistically. All human beings engaged in these three genres of literature.
But within these three genres of literature, there are various classifications with a philosophy that denotes each category. One of them is called a satire. According to Wikipedia, satire is a  genre of literature, and sometimes graphic and performing arts, in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, corporations, government or society itself, into improvement. Although satire is usually meant to be humorous, its greater purpose is often constructive social criticism, using wit as a weapon and as a tool to draw attention to both particular and wider issues in society. Unarguably, satire is the most severe genus for any writer. But this is what George Orwell represented in the 1940s.

The philosophy of George Orwell can indeed spark a painstaking rejoin. According to him, telling the truth in our society is a revolutionary act. As he puts it, ‘in a time of universal truth, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.’ In another context, George was quoted as, “what I have most wanted to do throughout the past ten years is to make political writing into an art. My starting point is always a feeling of partisanship, a sense of injustice. When I sit down to write a book, I do not say to myself, ‘I am going to produce the work of art.; I write it because there is some lie that I want to expose, some fact to which I want to draw attention, and my initial concern is to get a hearing. But I could not do the work of writing a book, or even a long magazine article, if it were not also an aesthetic experience.’

So we can see – an aesthetic experience, a lie that I want to expose, a sense of injustice – and yes, these are the things that instigate writers of satire. And one way to present this picture is to study the works of George Orwell circumspectly. Therefore, Animal Farm is not just a book of some certain animals rebelling against the farmer, Mr. Jones, and setting up their own farm. It is an allegory, a fable and a satire. It is about humanity as a whole. It is about the dishonest in power in the high places, about the masses in the hands of the crooked masters. It is about the Russian Revolution of 117, and probably, what may happen to people in the terrain of their leaders.

In the book, the behaviors of people, the power of belief, the kowtow of power by the masses, were all represented in the characterizations of the animals. Of course, after driving Mr. Jones from the farm by the animals, and Napoleon, a large, rather fierce-looking Berkshire boar, the only Berkshire on the farm, not much of a talker, but with a reputation for getting his own way ascended a leader; the animals were in another world of dictatorship and ideology. One of them was to say that all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than the others. But before the revolution that drove the owner of the farm away, the belief of the animals was that all ‘animals are equal.’ Of course, the weak animals had no options; they had to go along with Napoleon’s policies. This Napoleon was Joseph Stalin, dictator of the Soviet Union from the mid-1920s until his death in 1953.

For instance, look at how many stories of betrayal exhibited by political leaders in Africa. They use the masses as their ladder to power, but at the end, they dashed their hopes of the people by leaving them in isolation and deprivation. The people do the solidarity, voting earnestly, but at the end, they are left alone in wailing. This brings the ideology of Old Major, the old boar on the Manor Farm who first invented the idea of revolution to the animals. ‘Never listen to them when they tell you that Man and animals have a common interest, that the prosperity of animal is the prosperity of others. It is all lies. Man serves the interest of himself.’’

Who is the Man here in the word of Major? The Man here, are the political leaders, the abusers of power who flourished on people’s brain with suitable words to achieve their aim. They used all sorts of orientations to brainwash the masses into believing them, and the masses are left in the hand of gullibility. And the media, which hold the most effective right to censure the government, are in a state of pathetic. Many of them are not independent. The government controls every aspect of the media – the radio, the newspapers, and the TV. What about education, agriculture, law, entertainment, and infrastructures? All are manipulated by the government. As Orwell puts it, ‘he who controls the past controls the future; and he who controls the present controls the past.’

Of course, the government controls everything, including the liberty of the people. You read some books in school because the government approved them. You are permitted to work because you are allowed by the government. You are disbanded and cannot say your opinion because the government of your country never condones it. Look at how many journalists that have been killed in Nigeria by political suspected leaders?
George Orwell, who was not only a novelist but also a columnist, must have studied the downtrodden elements that were unleashed on the masses in the years of totalitarianism. But not alone that, George wrote the literature of all time, about the struggling of the masses in the hands of the masters, about the people’s liberty and freedom of expression, about the eradication of discrimination and dehumanization, prejudiced and deprivation. George Orwell, therefore, wrote the Africa politics, the abusers of power.
One of the predicaments of Africans is that they never learn from literature. Literature is not just an entertainment; it is our life.

By David Isoje