Monday, October 21, 2013

RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Publishers Weekly Review of Okey Ndibe's forthcoming book, Foreign Gods, Inc.

 

Ikhide,  I really  missed you in North Carolina. I was hoping to make a marriage proposal -  but alright

let us just be friends   since you no fit.

 

Gloria

 

 

 

 

 

From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ikhide
Sent: Monday, October 21, 2013 2:05 PM
To: USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Fw: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Publishers Weekly Review of Okey Ndibe's forthcoming book, Foreign Gods, Inc.

 

LOL! SMH. Wetin concern agbero with overload? I am sure Professor Gloria Emeagwali and Ikhide were married in the first life. It must have been the war of the roses, because Gloria is still pursuing Ikhide everywhere he goes, taunting him, jeering at him.

 

Abeg madam, remove hand from my shirt, I nor fit fight! I nor wan marry! I am happily married sef! Na by force? Shuo!

 

Abeg, Gloria, I kneel down beg you, leave me alone, I nor wan marry! Let's just be friends!

 

*cycles away slowly*

 

ps.

 

I hate this new yahoomail!

 

- Ikhide

 

Stalk my blog at http://www.xokigbo.com/

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

 

On Monday, October 21, 2013 1:42 PM, "Emeagwali, Gloria (History)" <emeagwali@mail.ccsu.edu> wrote:

“I am deeply appreciative to the West and to the white man for keeping our stories alive.” Ikhide

 

I hope you are appreciative of the East, too, for giving the paper on which the books are written

and  maybe the printed word, too. (China etc.). No offense to Guttenberg but the Asians did it first.

 You also have to be appreciative of the Arabs (Syrians/Lebanese) for the alphabet they passed on to

the Greeks and Romans.

 

Be grateful to the Syrian –American, Steve Jobs,  co-founder of  Apple Computer

and  Mark Dean, the African – American inventor-   for contributions to  the PC… …..

that we use to access the internet.

 

And the internet itself? Well Philip Emeagwali said he invented it- and so did Al Gore.

But that’s another story. Ha Ha.

 

But most of all don’t forget to be thankful -   for the 300 years of  unpaid slave  labor that helped to

build the Western world.

 

Prof. Falola keep writing your books. We shall consult them.

 

GE

………………………………………………………………………

 

 

 

Sent: Monday, October 21, 2013 11:01 AM

Subject: Fw: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Publishers Weekly Review of Okey Ndibe's forthcoming book, Foreign Gods, Inc.

 

Ken, I will die without writing a book. I am too ashamed to publish at home (our publishing houses are mostly giant staplers), and too embarrassed to publish in the West (I am the other, they will italicize my world). As we say in my village, "it doesn't worth it!"

 

That is pretty much what I said on Facebook yesterday. African literature owes its prominence and survival to the West, and unlike most, I am deeply appreciative to the West and to the white man for keeping our stories alive. It has come at a huge cost though. Relying on the West to give us stature, resources and structure has been humiliating on many levels. The most important has been what's been and being lost in translation. On the other hand, what is the writer to do? Hand over a loved work to the giant staplers that call themselves publishing houses in say, Nigeria? I don't know, we may be stuck. Or maybe not. You should see the awesome works of African writers on the Internet. The Internet is fast becoming the publisher of choice for most writers of African extraction. There is hope.

 

Globalization has been great for us. Whoever says there is a digital divide does not know squat. Be well.

- Ikhide

Stalk my blog at www.xokigbo.com

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

 

On Sunday, October 20, 2013 12:55 PM, kenneth harrow <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:

congrats to okey.

i wish okey, or ikhide, or someone knowledgeable about the publishing industry, would give us a comment on the choice of okey to go with this press. i would like to know, at least briefly, how such a choice to opt for this press would compare with choosing a nigerian press.

i want  it clear that this is not a reproach, but rather an attempt to understand better how globalization is framing these kinds of decisions.

all i gather, going to soho's website, is that it is a small, hip new press. i don't know what the options in nigeria would be; i don't know if by publishing with soho it won't be readily available in nigeria, or africa, but rather would be going for a western set of readers? are there nigerian presses being distributed here in the states that would be attractive to writers like okey?

i look forward to reading your book okey, wherever  it comes out!

ken

On 10/20/13 12:07 PM, Ikhide wrote:

 

Congratulations, Okey...

 

- Ikhide

Stalk my blog at www.xokigbo.com

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

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professor of english

michigan state university

department of english

619 red cedar road

room C-614 wells hall

east lansing, mi 48824

ph. 517 803 8839

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Sent: Monday, October 21, 2013 11:01 AM

Subject: Fw: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Publishers Weekly Review of Okey Ndibe's forthcoming book, Foreign Gods, Inc.

 

Ken, I will die without writing a book. I am too ashamed to publish at home (our publishing houses are mostly giant staplers), and too embarrassed to publish in the West (I am the other, they will italicize my world). As we say in my village, "it doesn't worth it!"

 

That is pretty much what I said on Facebook yesterday. African literature owes its prominence and survival to the West, and unlike most, I am deeply appreciative to the West and to the white man for keeping our stories alive. It has come at a huge cost though. Relying on the West to give us stature, resources and structure has been humiliating on many levels. The most important has been what's been and being lost in translation. On the other hand, what is the writer to do? Hand over a loved work to the giant staplers that call themselves publishing houses in say, Nigeria? I don't know, we may be stuck. Or maybe not. You should see the awesome works of African writers on the Internet. The Internet is fast becoming the publisher of choice for most writers of African extraction. There is hope.

 

Globalization has been great for us. Whoever says there is a digital divide does not know squat. Be well.

- Ikhide

Stalk my blog at www.xokigbo.com

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

 

On Sunday, October 20, 2013 12:55 PM, kenneth harrow <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:

congrats to okey.

i wish okey, or ikhide, or someone knowledgeable about the publishing industry, would give us a comment on the choice of okey to go with this press. i would like to know, at least briefly, how such a choice to opt for this press would compare with choosing a nigerian press.

i want  it clear that this is not a reproach, but rather an attempt to understand better how globalization is framing these kinds of decisions.

all i gather, going to soho's website, is that it is a small, hip new press. i don't know what the options in nigeria would be; i don't know if by publishing with soho it won't be readily available in nigeria, or africa, but rather would be going for a western set of readers? are there nigerian presses being distributed here in the states that would be attractive to writers like okey?

i look forward to reading your book okey, wherever  it comes out!

ken

On 10/20/13 12:07 PM, Ikhide wrote:

 

Congratulations, Okey...

 

- Ikhide

Stalk my blog at www.xokigbo.com

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

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--

kenneth w. harrow

faculty excellence advocate

professor of english

michigan state university

department of english

619 red cedar road

room C-614 wells hall

east lansing, mi 48824

ph. 517 803 8839

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From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ikhide
Sent: Monday, October 21, 2013 11:01 AM
To: Kenn Harrow; USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Fw: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Publishers Weekly Review of Okey Ndibe's forthcoming book, Foreign Gods, Inc.

 

Ken, I will die without writing a book. I am too ashamed to publish at home (our publishing houses are mostly giant staplers), and too embarrassed to publish in the West (I am the other, they will italicize my world). As we say in my village, "it doesn't worth it!" 

 

That is pretty much what I said on Facebook yesterday. African literature owes its prominence and survival to the West, and unlike most, I am deeply appreciative to the West and to the white man for keeping our stories alive. It has come at a huge cost though. Relying on the West to give us stature, resources and structure has been humiliating on many levels. The most important has been what's been and being lost in translation. On the other hand, what is the writer to do? Hand over a loved work to the giant staplers that call themselves publishing houses in say, Nigeria? I don't know, we may be stuck. Or maybe not. You should see the awesome works of African writers on the Internet. The Internet is fast becoming the publisher of choice for most writers of African extraction. There is hope.

 

Globalization has been great for us. Whoever says there is a digital divide does not know squat. Be well.

 

- Ikhide

 

Stalk my blog at http://www.xokigbo.com/

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

 

On Sunday, October 20, 2013 12:55 PM, kenneth harrow <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:

congrats to okey.
i wish okey, or ikhide, or someone knowledgeable about the publishing industry, would give us a comment on the choice of okey to go with this press. i would like to know, at least briefly, how such a choice to opt for this press would compare with choosing a nigerian press.
i want  it clear that this is not a reproach, but rather an attempt to understand better how globalization is framing these kinds of decisions.
all i gather, going to soho's website, is that it is a small, hip new press. i don't know what the options in nigeria would be; i don't know if by publishing with soho it won't be readily available in nigeria, or africa, but rather would be going for a western set of readers? are there nigerian presses being distributed here in the states that would be attractive to writers like okey?
i look forward to reading your book okey, wherever  it comes out!
ken

On 10/20/13 12:07 PM, Ikhide wrote:

- Ikhide

 

Stalk my blog at http://www.xokigbo.com/

Follow me on Twitter: @ikhide

Join me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide

 

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--

kenneth w. harrow

faculty excellence advocate

professor of english

michigan state university

department of

english

619 red cedar road

room C-614 wells hall

east lansing, mi 48824

ph. 517 803 8839

harrow@msu.edu

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