Chinua
Achebe, the internationally celebrated Nigerian author, statesman and
dissident who gave literary birth to modern Africa with "Things Fall
Apart" and continued for decades to rewrite and reclaim the history of
his native country, has died. He was 82.
Achebe died following a brief illness, said his agent, Andrew Wylie.
"He
was also a beloved husband, father, uncle and grandfather, whose wisdom
and courage are an inspiration to all who knew him," Wylie said.
His
eminence worldwide was rivaled only by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Toni
Morrison and a handful of others. Achebe was a moral and literary model
for countless Africans and a profound influence on such American writers
as Morrison, Ha Jin and Junot Diaz.
As a Nigerian,
Achebe lived through and helped define revolutionary change in his
country, from independence to dictatorship to the disastrous war between
Nigeria and the breakaway country of Biafra in the late 1960s. He knew
both the prestige of serving on government commissions and the fear of
being declared an enemy of the state. He spent much of his adult life in
the United States, but never stopped calling for democracy in Nigeria
or resisting literary honors from a government he refused to accept.
His
public life began in his mid-20s. He was a resident of London when he
completed his handwritten manuscript for "Things Fall Apart," a short
novel about a Nigerian tribesman's downfall at the hands of British
colonialists.
Turned
down by several publishers, the book was finally accepted by Heinemann
and released in 1958 with a first printing of 2,000. Its initial review
in The New York Times ran less than 500 words, but the novel soon became
among the most important books of the 20th century, a universally
acknowledged starting point for postcolonial, indigenous African
fiction, the prophetic union of British letters and African oral
culture.
"It
would be impossible to say how `Things Fall Apart' influenced African
writing," the African scholar Kwame Anthony Appiah once observed. "It
would be like asking how Shakespeare influenced English writers or
Pushkin influenced Russians. Achebe didn't only play the game, he
invented it."
"Things
Fall Apart" has sold more than 8 million copies worldwide and has been
translated into more than 50 languages. Achebe also was a forceful
critic of Western literature about Africa, especially Joseph Conrad's
"Heart of Darkness," standard reading for millions, but in Achebe's
opinion, a defining example of how even a great Western mind could
reduce a foreign civilization to barbarism and menace.
"Now,
I grew up among very eloquent elders. In the village, or even in the
church, which my father made sure we attended, there were eloquent
speakers. So if you reduce that eloquence which I encountered to eight
words ... it's going to be very different," Achebe told The Associated
Press in 2008. "You know that it's going to be a battle to turn it
around, to say to people, `That's not the way my people respond in this
situation, by unintelligible grunts, and so on; they would speak.' And
it is that speech that I knew I wanted to be written down."
His
first novel was intended as a trilogy and the author continued its
story in "A Man of the People" and "Arrow of God." He also wrote short
stories, poems, children's stories and a political satire, "The Anthills
of Savannah," a 1987 release that was the last full-length fiction to
come out in his lifetime. Achebe, who used a wheelchair in his later
years, would cite his physical problems and displacement from home as
stifling to his imaginative powers.
Achebe
never did win the Nobel Prize, which many believed he deserved, but in
2007 he did receive the Man Booker International Prize, a $120,000 honor
for lifetime achievement. Achebe, paralyzed from the waist down since a
1990 auto accident, lived for years in a cottage built for him on the
campus of Bard College, a leading liberal arts school north of New York
City where he was a faculty member. He joined Brown University in 2009
as a professor of languages and literature.
Achebe,
a native of Ogidi, Nigeria, regarded his life as a bartering between
conflicting cultures. He spoke of the "two types of music" running
through his mind_ Ibo legends and the prose of Dickens. He was also
exposed to different faiths. His father worked in a local missionary and
was among the first in their village to convert to Christianity. In
Achebe's memoir "There Was a Country," he wrote that his "whole artistic
career was probably sparked by this tension between the Christian
religion" of his parents and the "retreating, older religion" of his
ancestors. He would observe the conflicts between his father and great
uncle and ponder "the essence, the meaning, the worldview of both
religions."
For
much of his life, he had a sense that he was a person of special gifts
who was part of an historic generation. Achebe was so avid a reader as a
young man that his nickname was "Dictionary." At Government College,
Umuahia, he read Shakespeare, Dickens, Robert Louis Stevenson and
Jonathan Swift among others. He placed his name alongside an
extraordinary range of alumni – government and artistic leaders from
Jaja Wachukwa, a future ambassador to the United Nations; to future
Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka; Achebe's future wife (and mother of their
four children) Christine Okoli; and the poet Christopher Okigbo, a close
friend of Achebe's who was killed during the Biafra war.
After
graduating from the University College of Ibadan, in 1953, Achebe was a
radio producer at the Nigerian Broadcasting Corp., then moved to London
and worked at the British Broadcasting Corp. He was writing stories in
college and called "Things Fall Apart" an act of "atonement" for what he
says was the abandonment of traditional culture. The book's title was
taken from poet William Butler Yeats' "The Second Coming," which
includes the widely quoted line, "Things fall apart; the centre cannot
hold."
His
novel was nearly lost before ever seen by the public. When Achebe
finished his manuscript, he sent it to a London typing service, which
misplaced the package and left it lying in an office for months. The
proposed book was received coolly by London publishers, who doubted the
appeal of fiction from Africa. Finally, an educational adviser at
Heinemann who had recently traveled to west Africa had a look and
declared: "This is the best novel I have read since the war."
The
opening sentence was as simple, declarative and revolutionary as a line
out of Hemingway: "Okonkwo was well known throughout the nine villages
and even beyond." Africans, Achebe had announced, had their own history,
their own celebrities and reputations. In mockery of all the Western
books about Africa, Achebe ended with a colonial official observing
Okonkwo's fate and imagining the book he will write: "The Pacification
of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger." Achebe's novel was the
opening of a long argument on his country's behalf.
"Literature
is always badly served when an author's artistic insight yields to
stereotype and malice," Achebe said during a 1998 lecture at Harvard
University that cited Joyce Cary's "Mister Johnson" as a special
offender. "And it becomes doubly offensive when such a work is
arrogantly proffered to you as your story. Some people may wonder if,
perhaps, we were not too touchy, if we were not oversensitive. We really
were not."
Achebe
could be just as critical of his own country. The novels "A Man of the
People" and "No Longer at Ease" were stories of corruption and collapse
that anticipated the Nigerian civil war of 1967-70 and the years of
mismanagement that followed. He not only supported Biafra's
independence, but was a government envoy and a member of a committee
that was to write up the new and short-lived country's constitution. He
would flee from Nigeria and return many times and in 2004 refused the
country's second-highest award, the Commander of the Order of the
Federal Republic, in protest over conditions under President Olusegun
Obasanjo.
"For
some time now, I have watched events in Nigeria with alarm and dismay,"
he said in an open letter to the president, referring to allegations of
corruption and lawlessness in Achebe's southeastern home state of
Anambra.
"A
small clique of renegades, openly boasting its connections in high
places, seems determined to turn my homeland into a bankrupt and lawless
fiefdom. ... I had a strong belief that we would outgrow our
shortcomings under leaders committed to uniting our diverse peoples."
Besides
his own writing, Achebe served for years as editor of Heinemann's
"African Writer Series," which published works by Nadine Gordimer,
Stephen Biko and others. He also edited numerous anthologies of African
stories, poems and essays. In "There Was a Country," he considered the
role of the modern African writer.
"What
I can say is that it was clear to many of us that an indigenous African
literary renaissance was overdue," he wrote. "A major objective was to
challenge stereotypes, myths, and the image of ourselves and our
continent, and to recast them through stories – prose, poetry, essays,
and books for our children. That was my overall goal."
Source: Huffington Post
No comments:
Post a Comment