we see the goals of fiction differently. i suppose there is no reason for us to have to agree. i think of the words, at their best, as inspiring the reader, not as instructing the reader. i don't see fiction as a transparent glass, as achebe writes, through which the real culture or history appears. i think we read to be moved, to be in tune with what is moving the words. if i want to read about igbos, why would i read works of fiction anyway? i can always read ethnologies, and maybe find it interesting how an author plays with notions and values tied to some cultural and its history. but frankly novelists are neither ethnologists nor historians, and for me should not ever by the place to go to find some truth about culture and history, but rather some other notion of truth that depends upon insights whose strengths and values are in their expression.
i believe my children and grandchildren will have the most to gain when they read something that inspires them, not that instructs them. the inspiration speaks to something other than verisimilitude, more to shared vision.
there is nothing, for me, that makes facts a requirement for that vision. if as i read it the vision turns me off, the evocation of our shared reality and history grounded in some values i despise, i suppose i could use a word like false to describe it, but rather i would use a word like weak, trivial, worthless. it isn't weak or strong because of its credibility, it is something else.
for instance, one of my favorite scenes in abani's Song of Night is his evocation of the goddess idemilli, as he spells it. it is an amazing vision, at times appearing elsewhere in his fiction as the virgin of guadeloupe. nothing particularly factual about this mamiwatta for me; but she is a transcendent figure that informs other moments, as in the ending of Song of Night when My Luck comes home, and his mother embraces him. that is a moment of truth. i don't look outside the novel for its truth to sustain me--the words do that work, they lift me. i am not researching the goddess to be lifted, i am going on the wave of the author's prose.
again, as a poet, you surely understand that.
my last reflection is that realism, as a genre, is both conservative and dated. it responds to an earlier capitalist period where the reproduction of class values and life depended on fiction to inform those dominant classes with class value. with the advent of modernism, patriarchy and capitalism encountered countervailing discourses and narrative that undermined their symbolic order. i can't see going back to realism's project as a positive move for african literature or cinema. to the contrary.
best
ken
On 11/9/11 3:13 AM, Chidi Anthony Opara wrote:
"knowing something bout a culture might be important if you are an anthropologist, but i though we were talking about literature, about fiction, about creativity, about vision, about words and texts? why must african literature always be reduced to the lowest common denominator on the scale of literary value, i.e., fidelity, mimeticism. this is not a valid criticism of any literature or art whatsoever, and if it were, we might begin by eliminating everything of value that's ever been written by african authors and turn to the weakest imitators". --------Kenneth Harrow.--
Literature should portray life and life is factual. Fictional literature employs the style of fiction to portray the facts of life. What are fictionalized are locations, characters and situations, facts are not tampered with. Fictional literature should never portray fallacies as facts; otherwise it will no longer be a credible source of information for generations.When Obierika in "Things Fall Apart" tells the District Officer that Okonkwo's kinsmen cannot bury him because he committed suicide, what is always portrayed is an important aspect of Igbo culture. Anybody anywhere reading that would know the position of Igbos on suicide.If Obierika helps the District Officer to bury Okonkwo and receives applause from the people of Umuofia, would it have been a factual portrayal of the position of Igbos on suicide? Would this have been excused on ground of fiction?-----Chidi.
From: kenneth harrow <harrow@msu.edu>
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 8, 2011 4:48 PM
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Chimamanda Adichie's "Yellow Hibiscus" By Chidi Anthony Opara
knowing something bout a culture might be important if you are an anthropologist, but i though we were talking about literature, about fiction, about creativity, about vision, about words and texts? why must african literature always be reduced to the lowest common denominator on the scale of literary value, i.e., fidelity, mimeticism. this is not a valid criticism of any literature or art whatsoever, and if it were, we might begin by eliminating everything of value that's ever been written by african authors and turn to the weakest imitators--
ken
On 11/8/11 8:28 AM, woleatere01@yahoo.com wrote:Well, I empathise with your worries and disappointment even though I am not Ibo. The truth is that most African cultures are daily turned upside down and rendered obsolete by writers who know next to nothing about such cultures all in the name of modernisation and globalisaton. What more, such writers are rewarded with awards and cash gifts in order to continue the 'good" work. Unfortunately those of us who know better, merely sit back looking helpless, bemoan our fate and smply agonise. It is a tragedy, my brother. Adewole Atere. Ph.D, Associate Professor of Socology, Osun State University, Okuku Campus, Nigeria.Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device from MTN
From: "Public Information Projects Management\(PIPROM\)" <piprom@ymail.com>Date: Tue, 8 Nov 2011 01:40:10 -0800 (PST)To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com<usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>; IgboWorldForum@yahoogroups.com<IgboWorldForum@yahoogroups.com>; wolesoyinkasociety<WoleSoyinkaSociety@yahoogroups.com>; NIgerianWorldForum@yahoogroups.com<NIgerianWorldForum@yahoogroups.com>; NigerianID@yahoogroups.com<NigerianID@yahoogroups.com>; NaijaElections@yahoogroups.com<NaijaElections@yahoogroups.com>; NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com<NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com>; NaijaPolitics@yahoogroups.com<NaijaPolitics@yahoogroups.com>ReplyTo: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.comSubject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Chimamanda Adichie's "Yellow Hibiscus" By Chidi Anthony Opara
--I have to issue a caveat at this point that this piece is not a critique in the traditional sense, of the work of the well known young Nigerian novelist. It is rather an observation of what I consider a serious faux pas in social relationships in Igboland in Adichie's "Purple Hibiscus", which should have been titled "Yellow Hibiscus".Let me hasten to say that I have not read any of the novelist's well publicized works before now. I have however read some of the reviews, mostly by Western reviewers, on her and her works, many of which I consider very patronizing. Such reviews make me suspicious, the Adichie reviews do.When Chinagorom, my twelve-year-old daughter who has just entered senior secondary school came back from school last week and greeted me as she is wont to whenever she has a new book with "daddy do you know this writer?" waving "Purple Hibiscus" which she said is part of her Literature in English syllabus, I saw that as an opportunity to see what the novelist has to say. I borrowed the book and settled down to read.I must confess that that I fell in love with the writer's narrative style. The book is what Western reviewers like to label "unputdownable".The story is set in South-Eastern Nigeria, which is the homeland of the Igbos, a majority ethnic nationality in Nigeria. The period is in the 1980s through the 1990s. Please note that I am an Igbo, born and bred in a predominately Roman Catholic part of Igboland some forty-eight years ago.Even though I got worried early in the reading with the characterization of Igbo Roman catholic priests as spiritually and intellectually inferior to their white colleagues, I nevertheless let that be.What got my full attention is the seriously strained relationship between the main character's father and her grandfather on ground of differences in religious belief. Kambili's(main character) father is a literate wealthy Christian with a tradition title. He is a community man. His father on the other hand is an illiterate poor pagan. He is also a community man. Kambili's father is his only son and first child.
The relationship between father and son, which placed the son in a stronger position, is not such that can be tolerated anywhere in Igboland at anytime, even in this so called modern. You cannot, for instance decree that your father should not enter your house in any Igbo village for whatever reasons. If that becomes necessary, it will be the prerogative of Umunna. If you do that, fines will be imposed and you will be ordered to rescind that decision and to apologies to your father or face ostracization, your wealth and position notwithstanding, but Kambili's father did that and got away with it, there is even an "Omere Ora"(benefactor of the community)title to the bargain. That is not Igboland.There are many other situations in the portions I read before dropping the book like a hot iron, that portray the Igbos as either uncultured or easily influenced by wealth and position to abandon their customs and traditions.One would not have bothered writing this piece if one had not read distinguished Professors in World class Universities proudly saying "I teach Adichie" or words to that effect, meaning that they also teach "Purple Hibiscus". Chances are that future mindsets about the Igbos will mirror these negative, albeit false impressions in the novel. I cringe whenever I remember that my young daughter is reading this book as part of her school curriculum.Public Information Projects Management(PIPROM) is an Internet based non profit making public information project.
PIPROM Website?
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-- kenneth w. harrow distinguished professor of english michigan state university department of english east lansing, mi 48824-1036 ph. 517 803 8839 harrow@msu.edu
You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
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For previous archives, visit http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
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-- kenneth w. harrow distinguished professor of english michigan state university department of english east lansing, mi 48824-1036 ph. 517 803 8839 harrow@msu.edu
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