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Thread: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

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    Nigeria Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    In 1958 Chinua Achebe published Things Fall Apart, the novel that helped usher in a new wave of African literature. Until that point literature concerning African had been written by European colonials, and was rife with derogatory depictions of African people and their varied cultures. With the contributions of Camara Laye, Amos Tutuola, and Chinua Achebe, amongst others, there came a rebellion of sorts - the African novel, going against ?an age-old practice: the colonization of one people?s story by another.?

    African literature is the subject of Home And Exile (2001), a gathering of three lectures Achebe gave to an audience at Harvard University in 1998. Across these he uses his podium to to discuss the effect of colonialism on African letters and the need for balance. Of particular interest are the autobiographical elements peppered throughout, which give insights into Achebe?s early life in Nigeria and the beginnings of his adult life as a writer.

    Achebe starts with his own people, the Igbo. He dismisses the notion that, in numbering over ten million, they can be a tribe by dictionary definition. He finds nation fits better, acknowledging that it?s not a perfect fit. In describing the Igbo culture, a culture of stories, he finds room to open up the differences wrought by colonialism, impressing upon the reader a little tale about a meeting of animals where the chicken, instead attending to a personal matter, is voted man?s primary sacrificial animal in his absence. It?s a fitting parallel with the native in colonial African literature whereby a portrait of the continent has been drawn up by outsiders, at least as far back as 1561, when John Lok, writing of his voyage to West Africa, describes Africans as:
    ?a people of beastly living, without a God, lawe, religion ? whose women are common for they contract no matrimonie, neither have respect to chastitie ? whose inhabitants dwell in caves and dennes: for these are their houses, and the flesh of serpents their meat as writeth Plinie and Diodorus Siculus. They have no speach, but rather a grinning and chattering. There are also people without heads, having their eyes and mouths in their breasts.
    Compound that with centuries of unfair writing and you get to a moment in a Nigerian school when, having read Joyce Cary?s Mister Johnson, about a young Nigerian, it strikes as being superficial:
    It was a landmark rebellion. Here was a whole class of young Nigerian students, among the brightest of their generation, united in their view of a book of English fiction in complete opposition to their English teacher, who was moreover backed by the authority of metropolitan critical judgment.
    In talking of colonial literature, Achebe understands the treatment of African people as a way of justifying colonialism and the slave trade it produced, citing works by the likes of the aforementioned Cary, Joseph Conrad, and, especially, Elspeth Huxley. V.S. Naipaul, for whom much was made of his nastiness in Patrick French?s authorised biography earlier in the year, is also lambasted for his ignorant portrayal of Africa in A Bend In The River.

    Although she?s not named, Buchi Emecheta, also gets a notable mention: not for her portrayal of Africa, but for going in the opposite direction. Having moved to London to pursue her writing career, she is quoted on the subject of African fiction and the dilution of her Africanness. (?After reading the first page you tell yourself you are plodding. But when you are reading the same thing written by an English person who lives here you find you are enjoying it because the language is so academic, so perfect.?) This notion of going in the opposite directon echoes an account opening the book of Achebe?s first ride in a car, in which he was seated so as to watch the road behind. It?s something he returns to in the third lecture, given that he, like Emecheta, no longer lives in Nigeria:
    People have sometimes asked me if I have thought of writing a novel about America since I have now been living here for some years. My answer has always been ?No, I don?t think so.? Actually, living in America for some years is not the only reason for writing a novel on it. Kafka wrote such a novel without leaving Prague. No, my reason is that America has enough novelists writing about her, and Nigeria too few.
    Achebe?s focus now, unlike the child looking back, is squarely on the road ahead for Africa and its literature, noting his anxiety over ?what remains to be done, in Africa and in the world at large?. From his podium he calls for writers to remain at home and write about it, to post their manuscripts rather than go overseas and risk dilution. Only with the right people contributing their own stories can literature find the necessary balance be made that will lead to a universal civilisation.

    On literature he calls for a fair appraisal of writers? work, comparing Dylan Thomas? review of Amos Tutuola?s The Palm-Wine Drinkard to Huxley?s, wherein Thomas praises it for its language, Huxley uses the opportunity to take a broad swipe at African art (?It is possessed by spirits and the spirits are malign.?) Regardless of unfair treatments, Achebe notes that to read them:
    ?is the strongest vote of confidence we can give our writers and their work - to put them on notice that we will go to their offering for wholesome pleasure and insight, and not a rehash of old stereotypes which gained currency long ago in the slave trade and poisoned, perhaps forever, the wellsprings of our common humanity.
    That Achebe covers so much ground in just over a hundred pages shows a highly concentrated approach to African literature. Those seeking a true autobiography will not find it here, given that it only touches on his early years, but what it does provide is an interesting insight into Achebe?s mind, with him pointing out the little details that have made him the influential writer that he is today, home and away.

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Stewart,

    This site is highly addictive and I keep trying to give it up. This piece of your is what prevetned me this time. I am determined to get hold of Achebe's Home And Exile (2001). Normally I would take the easy way out and digest the ideas that are so clearly expressed in your excellent commentaries. Please do not stop writing them! However, this time you are convincing enough to force me to get hold of the original. Clearly a seminal work that must be read by all those who feel an urgent need to deepen our understanding of "the wellsprings of our common humanity" . Those very springs may very well dry up before we come to our senses. Humanism sort of assumes there are some human beings about and we can no longer take that prospect for granted. Hence the importance of the insights of Achebe and his like. In spite of those who continue to spread poison, writers like Achebe (and most contributors to this website), remind me that:
    "Despite their kind
    some elements of worth
    persist with difficulty
    here and there on Earth"

    (Hugh MacDiarmid concluding a poem he wrote attacking Houseman's poem that glorifiedthe colonial butchery of mercenaries. I quote from memory so it may not nbbe 100% accurate.)

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Nice write-up, Stewart. As always. Makes me even more eager to read Achebe. I'm glad
    to see you focusing some on the African Literature thread at this forum. I feel very
    lacking in regard to my knowledge of literature from Africa. I will look for a copy of
    Home and Exile.

    ...and I agree with Jan Mbali. This forum is addictive .

    ~Titania
    Last edited by titania7; 26-Oct-2008 at 19:31.
    "All men have the same defect: they wait to live, for they have not the courage of each instant.
    Why not invest enough passion in each moment to make it an eternity?" ~E. M. Cioran

  4. #4

    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Quote Originally Posted by Jan Mbali View Post
    This site is highly addictive and I keep trying to give it up.
    I can understand the addictive part, especially as we are constantly introduced to new names from all over that we feel must be pursued. But to give it up?

    Clearly a seminal work that must be read by all those who feel an urgent need to deepen our understanding of "the wellsprings of our common humanity".
    I honestly hadn't heard of it until yesterday when I popped into Borders but, on seeing what it was about, I thought it might be a good bit of grounding in Achebe and his ideas before going on to read his fiction. I have read Things Fall Apart once before and was a couple of chapters into a reread, which I'll start again now, and I have his No Longer At Ease ready to go too.

    Achebe, in listing a number of African titles, makes me eager to read them. Luckily I've got one under my belt already, in Nadine Gordimer's July's People. With Achebe serving as editor on the forthcoming Penguin African Classics series it should give him that what he wishes as regards the chance for African authors to be read.

    Quote Originally Posted by titania7
    I'm glad to see you focusing some on the African Literature thread at this forum. I feel very lacking in regard to my knowledge of literature from Africa.
    It's an area I think few of us have much knowledge of, perhaps evidenced by the low posting in this area of the forum. It's something I'll be keen to remedy in the coming months with more Achebe, some Camara Laye, Bessie Head, Ba Mariama, and a third attempt at finally getting into Tayeb Salih's Season Of Migration To The North.

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    Nigeria Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Stewart,
    I'm pleased to say I recently added 3 books relating to African lit to my collection. Achebe's Antills of Savannah (Nominee for the 1987 Booker McConnell Prize), a book of essays on Achebe's novels by G.D. Killam (fomerly a lecturer in English at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria), and Nadine Gordimer's Burger's Daughter. Joyce Carol Oates had this to say about the latter:

    "This is a novel of social and political import which is also an intensely subjective prose poem, mesmerizing in the subtle cadences of its language."

    Leave it to Oates to write such copious praise. Wonder if this book is as good as it sounds. Unfortunately, I'll have to wait awhile to find out (my to-be-read-soon stack is already piled high).

    There is a fabulous essay on Things Fall Apart in the Killam book. When I get around to reading the novel, I'll certainly benefit highly from this essay. Maybe I can post the most choice parts of it to the list. You, I think, might appreciate it.

    I'm looking forward to your forthcoming additions to this thread, Stewart. You always outdo yourself. Thus, I can't wait.

    ~Titania

    "One of the truest tests of integrity is its
    blunt refusal to be compromised."
    ~Chinua Achebe
    Last edited by titania7; 27-Oct-2008 at 16:39.
    "All men have the same defect: they wait to live, for they have not the courage of each instant.
    Why not invest enough passion in each moment to make it an eternity?" ~E. M. Cioran

  6. #6

    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Great review Stewart.I read things falling apart lastweek and love the easy style of Achebe.He brings you to the heart of Africa like you always been part of the tribe.Your an insider.All the magic and superstition suddenly make sense and your own life take a flat unimaginative side.I just might start to wear gri gri's for luck.The story line is perfect,the main charctere could have been any occidental guy,ambicious and bitter,just more touching for the flourish of african life.
    I shall read any Achebe i can grab,surely Home and Exile.

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    In 1958 Chinua Achebe published Things Fall Apart, the novel that helped usher in a new wave of African literature. Until that point literature concerning African had been written by European colonials, and was rife with derogatory depictions of African people and their varied cultures.
    I think it's curious that in conversations about Africa, no one ever remember Egypt. Is it because they're not black? Because they're all Arabic? Naguib Mahfouz was already writing African literature in the '30s, and for me he remains the best African novelist that ever was

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    well, the thread is named: "Chinua Achebe: Home and Exile"...

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Oh, really? I didn't notice that...

    I was addressing the claim that before Achebe, literature about Africa was written by Europeans. But Achebe was still a babe when Mahfouz was already an accomplished novelist. I thought my point was clear

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Yes, I guess you are right then that Mahfouz is considered as an Arabic author representing the Arabic world, whereas people often limit the term "African literature" to the non-Arabic speaking parts of Africa. I do not think that anyone wants to express disrespect for Mahfouz or other Arabic writing authors from the African continent by doing this. A division according to geographic definitions of continents/regions would not make more sense, would it?
    Last edited by Rumpelstilzchen; 20-Dec-2011 at 13:07.

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Quote Originally Posted by Heteronym View Post
    I think it's curious that in conversations about Africa, no one ever remember Egypt.
    Which is why African literature begins with St Augustine, .

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    Default Re: Chinua Achebe: Home And Exile

    Quote Originally Posted by Liam View Post
    Which is why African literature begins with St Augustine, .
    Why not? A case can be made for him

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