Wednesday 9 November 2011


            CHINUA ACHEBE Things Fall Apart


Part  I  of  Chinua  Achebe’s  first  novel  Things  Fall  Apart  plunges  the  non-native  reader  into  the  world  of  the  Igbo,  with  detailed  descriptions  of  the  people’s  customs , beliefs  and  ceremonies.  Seamlessly  woven  into  the  narrative  fabric  are  accounts  of  the  Feast  of  the  New Yam,  the  negotioatian  of  bride  price  , the  ceremony  of  the  egwagwu ( ancestoral spirits)  the  nso-ani (sacrileges)  of  committing  violence  during  the  Week  of  Peace,  and  so  on;  these  details  together  with  the  numerous  proverbs  function  to  create  a  rich , vivid,  portrait of  traditional   Nigerian  culture.  The  writer’s  intimate  acquaintance  with  Igbo  culture  is  signaled  by  the  ability  to  closely  document  such  beliefs  and  practices.
            Critics  have  interpreted  the  narrative  voice  as  emanating  from  the  inside  of  the  author.  The  voice  can  be  a wise  recreation  of  the  persona  which  is heard  in  tales,  history, proverbs  and  poetry  belonging  to  an  oral  tradition.  Yet this   assertion will not  stand  the  test  of close  reading;  the  narrator  frequently  stands  apart ,  becoming  an  observer,   rather  than  an  implied  participant  unlike  authors  like  Ngugi  does.  The  phrases  like  “other people”- here the narrator is aligned more closely with the non-native readers than with the Igbo perspective, it is a sort of  a mediating role.


GABRIEL OKARA "The Mystic Drum"
               Gabriel Okara, the Nigerian poet and novelist, has infused his poetry with images of  his Nigerian delta birthplace and his writing welds the concept of his native language Ijaw with the English vocabulary. “The Mystic Drum” is an African poem both in content and form. Being an African, Okara goes back to his roots in history, religion and culture and folklore. Through its image and symbol, rhythm and tone, the poem expresses the subtle nuances of an African experience. In a way this poem justifies the modernist dictum, ‘ A poem should not mean, but

be’ . In African folklore, the beating of drums has ritualistic, and therefore mystical significance. The beating of the drum unites the mind and heart of the drum beater with the outer world of nature. But the idea of cosmic unity in the poem does not lasts long. There is an end to this beating of the drum. The poem’s thematic emphasis is not upon how man and nature became one when the mystic drum beats within him; but it’s about the brevity of this experience. The return to the reality, makes the poet sing : ‘ never to beat so loud any more’. 
            Here there is the dialectic between tradition and influences. There is no overt references to the neo-colonialism or cultural imperialism, and unlike Ngugi, Okara does not relate the problem of culture to the economic sphere.


WOLE SOYINKA  “ To My First White Hairs”
                Wole Soyinka’s “ To My First White Hairs”, presents the basic African theme of black verses white in a modernist expression using image and symbols. Soyinka, like Ezra Pound seems to present a picture of a black man’s thick curly black hair in the first part of the poem. The sudden appearance of  three white hairs announce the arrival of old age. This acceptance of age and maturity  that comes with the white hairs speaks the presence of the white minority in the black majority of African community. The absence of the white hairs, accentuates the reality of the blacks. Using symbolism the poet suggests a possibility of accepting the whites. The dialectic of affirmation and negation is evident in the last part of the poem where the poet renders an obscurity by the acceptance of the supremacy of the colonizers.


ARAVIND ADIGA  The White Tiger

Aravind  Adiga in his debut novel The White Tiger, which begged  him Man Booker Prize 2008, created two different India’s in one: “an India of Light and an India of Darkness”. (14) It is the India of  Darkness which is focused by the novelist articulating the voice of silent majority, trying to dismantle the discrimination between the “Big Bellies and the Small Bellies” (64) and create a society based  on the principles of equality and justice. Balram Halwai , the  protagonist is a typical voice of underclass metaphorically described  as “Rooster coop” (173) and struggling to set free from age-old slavery  and exploitation. His anger, protest, indulgence in criminal acts, prostitution, drinking, chasing, grabbing all the opportunities, means  fair or foul endorse deep-rooted frustration and its reaction against  the “haves”. Bloody acts, opportunism, entrepreneurial success of  Balram, emergence of Socialists in India alarm that the voice of the  underclass cannot be ignored for long. The novel is centred on Balram Halwai, a son of a rickshaw puller,destined to make sweets becomes Ashok Sharma. His transformation from Munna—Balram Halwai—White Tiger—Ashok Sharma is the blue print for the rise of underclass. Balram is the strong voice of underclass in which marginal farmers, landless labourers, jobless youths, poor, auto and taxi drivers, servants, prostitutes, beggars and
unprivileged figure.
 
          The secrets of success in a modern globalized world has summed up in the last section of the novel. Murder, manipulation, malpractices, opportunism, bribery, absconding police and judicial proceedings all are justified for success and teaching based on the facts of life. The novel tells  us that India is not shining and despite its claims of a booming economy, it is still heart of darkness,
which it has been since time immemorial.

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