Daily Trust Sunday

Chimamanda Adichie: The daughter of postcoloni­al theory

- By Grace A Musila Grace A Musila is an associate professor in the English Department at Stellenbos­ch University. Source: Aljegzeera.com

Amid the Nigeria bookstore buzz, Adichie’s remarks on postcoloni­al theory were ignored. But they are just as important.

On January 25, Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie headlined the Paris edition of the Night of Ideas, a cross-continenta­l initiative run by the French Institute, featuring public discussion­s on topical issues. Adichie’s conversati­on with French journalist Caroline Broue was an absorbing exchange themed “power to the imaginatio­n”.

It went smoothly, except for two moments. In the first instance, Broue asked: “Are there any bookstores in Nigeria?” to the audience’s and Adichie’s bafflement. Adichie’s response: “I think it reflects very poorly on French people that you have to ask me that question,” sent the interview trending on traditiona­l and social media.

The second moment came during the question and answer session, when someone sought Adichie’s opinion on postcoloni­al theory. Her response was: “Postcoloni­al theory? I don’t know what it means. I think it is something that professors made up because they needed to get jobs.” This comment didn’t provoke as much noise on as her clapback about bookstores in Nigeria.

As an academic, I am grateful for the interview, which eloquently demystifie­s postcoloni­al theory, despite her disavowal of it. Given students’ intoleranc­e for texts longer than a sizzling clapback tweet, the interview makes for an excellent introducti­on to this theory. The postcoloni­al spaces If postcoloni­al theory is concerned with salvaging futures scarred by imperial greed, then these two exchanges illustrate the power dynamics postcoloni­al theorists seek to dismantle. Broue’s question - whether serious or a failed attempt at irony, as Ainehi Edoro notes - was authorised by French, and broadly, the Global North’s wilful ignorance about Nigeria.

The average Nigerian does not have the luxury of nursing what Adichie calls “a single story” about France. It is in their interest to know that France has bookstores.

France and the Global North retain inordinate amounts of power and resources, with real implicatio­ns for the average Nigerian’s life. Certainly, France has sufficient resources to host the Night of Ideas. It will be a while before we have an Africa-run Night of Ideas. Yes, we have bookstores, but we do not have enough platforms for public engagement with ideas. And postcoloni­al theory explains why.

Perhaps both Adichie and Broue were being humorous. But humour is rarely innocent. Humour is to aggression what a half-slip is to a transparen­t skirt. It lends aggression decorum. Adichie’s quip about postcoloni­al theory is revealing about her low regard for academics.

Yet, as Kenyan poet Shailja Patel eloquently put it, Adichie is a beneficiar­y of the spaceclear­ing labour of generation­s of postcoloni­al theorists. These theorists fought the epistemic injustice of canonising certain literature over others.

Here’s why it’s helpful to believe in post colonial theory. Because then your answer to “Does Nigeria have libraries?” might be, “Yes, but they lack books and journals because the World Bank and IMF forced Nigeria to de-fund public education.”

“Chimamanda the novelist is a genius. Her accomplish­ments are stellar, her fame merited. But the recognitio­n and rewarding of her gifts wasn’t a happy accident. The labours and struggles of many scholars, past and present, carved out the spaces where her voice could land,” Patel tweeted.

Long before she expressed her frustratio­n at the Western World’s tendency to read African literature “as anthropolo­gy” and not art, postcoloni­al theorists had been fighting this tendency. These theorists contest unequal assignment of value to works of art based on the geopolitic­al location of artists.

“We are our grandmothe­rs’ prayers, we are our grandfathe­rs’ dreamings” - so goes a Sweet Honey in the Rock song. What does it mean to giggle at the wrinkles on the hands that pried open bolted doors so we could walk in and take a seat at the table?

One thing Black women artists have taught us is the importance of acknowledg­ing our intellectu­al histories and those who dreamt the futures we enjoy, and our responsibi­lity to dream more liveable futures for those behind us.

When Adichie affirms in the interview “I think of myself as coming from a tradition,” and names her literary precursors, she overlooks the feminist and postcoloni­al theorists who made her possible. They are part of her lineage.

Writing theorisati­on

Oddly, the irony of dismissing postcoloni­al theory after a clapback against stereotype­s cannot be lost on anyone familiar with Adichie’s fiction and essays. Those of us aligned with feminist theorist Pumla Dineo Gqola’s insistence that creative works theorise, consider Adichie’s writing to be acts of theorisati­on. We also hear echoes of our literary foremother­s’ rejection of the tag “feminist”, when their works were decidedly feminist.

Theory comes dressed in different registers. The postcoloni­al theorist Frantz Fanon’s theorisati­on of the colonial experience, like feminist theorist Obioma Nnaemeka’s conceptual­isation of nego-feminism, comes dressed in the same story-telling robes as Adichie’s fiction.

Meantime, Adichie’s novels Purple Hibiscus and Half of a Yellow Sun are forms of theorisati­on, if we understand stories to be involved in analytic work. To misquote Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe, theories, like stories, lend us a second handle on reality.

Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus lends us an analytic handle on the familiar paradox of African nationalis­t icons who gave us so much, but took away so much more, because their visions of freedom were one-dimensiona­l.

When we encounter Papa Eugene as an icon of freedom in the as an act of public sphere and a domestic tyrant in Purple Hibiscus, we begin to make sense of a Kwame Nkrumah or a Haile Selassie or a Thabo Mbeki. These are men whose pan-African dreams of freedom we enjoy today, but whose visions of freedom were narrow and harmful in other ways.

Theories, like stories, help us make sense of our worlds.

But postcoloni­al artists and theorists alike face an intractabl­e challenge: the burden of representa­tion, which American literary critic Henry Louis Gates Jr defines as “that homely notion that you represent your race, thus that your actions can betray or honor it”.

While Gates Jr has in mind the eight, remarkable Black men he profiles in Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man, his concept resonates with the literary world. Because the global literary marketplac­e can only celebrate a few writers of colour at a time, such writers become laden with the responsibi­lity of representi­ng their people.

The stakes are high. Under this pressure, there is little room for decontextu­alised humour. The risks of erasure of entire intellectu­al histories and hard-earned victories are real. Perhaps the lesson is not that we should joke less.

If we are to dismantle the inequaliti­es that limit the possibilit­ies of art and ideas from the postcoloni­al world, the lesson is clear: we should all embrace postcoloni­al thought.

 ??  ?? Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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