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Chinua Achebe - in full Albert Chinualumogu Achebe
Prominent Igbo (Ibo) writer, famous for his novels
describing the effects of Western customs and values on
traditional African society. Achebe's satire and his keen ear
for spoken language have made him one of the most highly
esteemed African writers in English. In 1990 Achebe was
paralyzed from the waist down in a serious car accident.
"I would be quite satisfied if my
novels (especially the ones I set in the past) did no more
than teach my readers that their past - with all its
imperfections - was not one long night of savagery from
which the first Europeans acting on God's behalf delivered
them" (from Morning Yet on
Creation Day, 1975)
Chinua Achebe was born in Ogidi, Nigeria, the son of a
teacher in a missionary school. His parents, though they
installed in him many of the values of their traditional Igbo
culture, were devout evangelical Protestants and christened
him Albert after Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria. In
1944 Achebe attended Government College in Umuahia. Like other
major Nigerian writers including Wole Soyinka, Elechi Amadi,
John Okigbo, John Pepper Clark, and Cole Omotso, he was also
educated at the University College of Ibadan, where he studied
English, history and theology. At the university Achebe
rejected his British name and took his indigenous name Chinua.
In 1953 he graduated with a BA. Before joining the Nigerian
Broadcasting Company in Lagos in 1954 he travelled in Africa
and America, and worked for a short time as a teacher. In the
1960s he was the director of External Services in charge of
the Voice of Nigeria.
"'But all that is going to change. In
ten years things will be quite different from what they are
now.'
The old man shook his head sadly but said no
more. Obi repeated his points. What made an osu different
from other men and women? Nothing but the ignorance of their
forefathers. Why should they, who had seen the light of the
Gospel, remain in that ignorance?"
(from No Longer at
Ease, 1960)
During the Nigerian Civil War (1967-70) he was in the
Biafran government service, and then taught at US and Nigerian
universities. In 1967 he cofounded a publishing company at
Enugu with the poet Christopher Okigbo. Later he was appointed
research fellow at the University of Nigeria, and then he
became a professor of English, retiring in 1981. Achebe has
been a professor emeritus since 1985. Since 1971 Achebe has
edited Okike, the leading journal of Nigerian new writing. He
has also held the post of Professor of English at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst. There he met James
Baldwin, also a faculty member, who was Professor of African
studies at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, and
Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Council at Anambra State
University of Technology, Enugu. In the1990s he has been a
faculty member at Bard College, a liberal arts school, where
he has taught literature to undergraduates.
'"If we leave our gods and follow your
god," asked another man, "who will protect us from the anger
of our neglected gods and ancestors?"
"Your gods are not alive and cannot do you
any harm," replied the white man. "They are pieces of wood
and stone."
When this was interpreted to the men of
Mbanta they broke into derisive laughter. These men must be
mad, they said to themselves. How else could they say that
Ani and Amadiora were harmless? And Idemili and Ogwugwu too?
And some of
them began to go away.'
(from Things Fall
Apart, 1958)
Achebe's first novel, THINGS FALL APART, appeared in 1958.
The story of a traditional village "big man" Okonkwo, and his
downfall has been translated into some 50 languages. It was
followed two year later by NO LONGER AT EASE, and ARROW OF GOD
(1964), which concerned traditional Igbo life as it clashed
with colonial powers in the form of missionaries and colonial
government. Among his later works is ANTHILLS OF THE SAVANNAH
(1987), a polyvocal text with multiple narrators. The story is
set in an imaginary West African state where Sam, a Sandhurst-trained
military officer, has become President. Chris Oriko and Ikem
Osodi, his friends, die when resisting brutal abuse of power.
A military coup eliminates Sam. Beatrice Okah - Chris's
London-educated girl friend - is entrusted with her community
of women to return the political sanity.
Achebe has also written collections of short stories,
poetry, and several books for juvenile readers. His essays
include BEWARE, SOUL BROTHER (1971) on his experiences during
the Civil War. He has received a Margaret Wrong Prize, the New
Statesman Jock Campbell Prize, and the Commonwealth Poetry
Prize. In 1983, upon the death of Mallan Aminu Kano, Achebe
was elected deputy national president of the People's
Redemption Party. As the director of Heineman Educational
Books in Nigeria, he has encouraged and published the work of
dozens of African writers. He founded in 1984 the bilingual
magazine Uwa ndi Igbo, a valuable source for Igbo
studies.
"He remembered his wife's twin
children, whom he had thrown away. What crime had they
committed? The Earth had decreed that they were an offence
on the land and must be destroyed. And if the clan did not
exact punishment for an offence against the great goddess,
her wrath was loosed on all the land and not juts on the
offender. As the elders said, if one finger brought oil it
soiled the others." (from
Things Fall Apart)
Achebe's own literary language is standard English blended
with pidgin, Igbo vocabulary, proverbs, images and speech
patterns. Achebe shows his skills as a storyteller in 'The
Madman' in which the social customs of the Ibo-speaking people
are strongly present. In the richly layered narrative a
nameless madman gets his revenge. Nwibe, an honored member of
a distant town Ogbu, plans to go to the market. There in the
market he had once chased a madman out of his hut and sent his
children to throw stones at him. As he washes by the river,
the madman takes his cloth. Nwibe runs naked after him,
shouting 'Stop the madman.' The thief with the cloth
disappears in the crowd, and Nwibe is taken to a medicine-man,
but he has lost his social position. "For how could a man be
the same again of whom witnesses from all the lands of Olu and
Igbo have once reported that they saw today a fine, hefty man
in his prime, stark naked, tearing through the crowds to
answer the call of the market-place. Such a man is marked
forever."
As an essayist Achebe has gained fame with his collections
MORNING YET ON CREATION DAY (1975), HOPES AND IMPEDIMENTS
(1988) and his long essay THE TROUBLE WITH NIGERIA (1983). In
'An Image of Africa' (1975) Achebe criticizes Conrad's racism
in Heart of Darkness. He has defended the use of the
English language in the production of African fiction,
insisting that the African novelist has an obligation to
educate, and has attacked European critics who have failed to
understand African literature on its own terms. Achebe has
defined himself as a cultural nationalist with a revolutionary
mission "to help my society regain belief in itself and put
away the complexes of the years of denigration and
self-abasement." But Achebe has not stopped criticizing
postcolonial African leaders who have pillaged economies.
During the military dictatorship of Gen. Sani Abacha he left
Nigeria several times. When the 70th birthday of the patriarch
of the modern African novel was celebrated at Bard College, on
November 2000, Wole Soyinka said: "Achebe never hesitates to
lay blame for the woes of the African continent squarely where
it belongs."
Things Fall Apart (1958), an unsentimental novel,
depicts the life of Okonkwo, ambitious and powerful leader of
an Igbo community, who counts on physical strength and
courage. Okonkwo's life is good: his compound is large, he has
no troubles with his wives, his garden grows yams, and he is
respected by his fellow villagers. When Okonkwo accidentally
kills a clansman, he is banished from the village for seven
years. But the vehicle for his downfall is his blindness to
circumstances and the missionary church, which brings with it
the new authority of the British District Commissioner. The
story is set in the 1890s, when missionaries and colonial
government made its intrusion into Igbo society. In this
process Okonkwo is destroyed, because his unwillingness to
change set him apart from the community and he is fighting
alone against colonialism. Achebe took the title of the book
from William Butler Yates's The Second Coming - "Things
fall apart; the centre cannot hold."
Arrow of God (1994) is set in the 1920s. The central
character is Ezeulu, priest, who sends one of his sons to
missionary school and gains in some respect the approval of
the English district superintendent. However, Ezeulu is
doomed, because when defending the traditions of his people he
is unyielding, unable to reach a compromise, and afraid of
losing his authority.
A Man of the People (1966) is a satire of
corruption, and power struggles in an African state in the
1960s. The central characters are the Minister of Culture,
Nanga, the man of the people, and teacher Odili, an African
Lucky Jim, who tells the story. Odili stands against the
government, but not because of ideological reasons. He has
personal reasons: Nanga has seduced his girl friend. Their
political confrontation becomes violent, Nanga's violent thugs
inflict havoc and chaos, and the army responds by staging a
coup. The novel reflects Achebe's deep personal disappointment
with what Nigeria has become since independence.
For further reading:
The Writings of Chinua Achebe
by G.D. Killam (1977); Chinua
AchebeChinua Achebe: Things Fall
Apart by Kate Turkington (1977);
Achebe's World by Robert Wren
(1980); Achebe and the Dilemma of
Nigerian Intellectual by Ian Gleen
(1983); Chinua Achebe
by David Carroll (1990); Chinua
Achebe by I.L. Innes (1990);
In the Beginning: Chinua Achebe at
Work by Ada Ugah (1990);
Critical Approaches to Anthills of the
Savannah, ed. by Holger Ehling
(1991); Reading Chinua Achebe
by Simon Gikandi (1991); Chinua
Achebe by Umelo Ojinmah (1991);
Chinua Achebe: A Celebration,
ed. by Kirsten Holt Peterson and Anna Rutheford (1991);
Chinua Achebe: A Biography by Ezenwa-Ohaeton (1997) -
NOTE: During the Nigerian Civil War - see above -
Biafra's national anthem was based on Jean Sibelius's
Finlandia. Sibelius, Finnish composer, wrote the
orchestral work in 1900.
Selected works:
- THINGS FALL APART, 1958
- NO LONGER AT EASE, 1960
- THE SACRIFICAL EGG AND OTHER STORIES, 1962
- ARROW OF GOD, 1964
- A MAN OF THE PEOPLE, 1966 - Kansan mies
- CHIKE AND THE RIVER, 1966
- BEWARE, SOUL BROTHER, 1971
- GIRLS AT WAR, 1972
- HOW THE LEOPARD GOT HIS CLAWS, 1972
- CHRISTMAS IN BIAFRA AND OTHER POEMS, 1973
- MORNING YET ON CREATION DAY, 1975
- THE DRUM, 1977
- THE FLUTE, 1977
- LITERATURE AND SOCIETY, 1980
- THE TROUBLE WITH NIGERIA, 1983
- THE WORLD OF OGBANJE, 1986
- ANTHILLS OF THE SAVANNA, 1987 - short listed for the
Booker Prize
- THE UNIVERSITY AND THE LEADERSHIP FACTOR IN NIGERIAN
POLITICS, 1988
- HOPES AND IMPEDIMENTS, 1989
- NIGERIAN TOPICS, 1989
- ed.: THE HEINEMANN BOOK OF CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN SHORT
STORIES, 1992 (with C.L. Innes)
- HOME AND EXILE, 2000
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