Thursday, 5 April 2018

World to celebrate Things Fall Apart at 60


World to celebrate Things Fall Apart at 60
Published January 11, 2018

 

Lovers of African literature, especially fans of legendary writer, Prof. Chinua Achebe, are gearing up for the 60th anniversary of his classical novel, Things Fall Apart.

Ten years ago, many literary folk celebrated the book when it clocked 50, at a time the legend was still alive. But because the life of a good work of art is longer than that of his creator, the book is still generating fervour across the world.

With over 20 million copies said to have been sold, while the publication has been translated into over 50 languages, it remains Africa’s best selling novel and an acclaimed piece anywhere.

A statement from the Christie and Chinua Achebe Foundation indicates that there will be events in Nigeria, South Africa, Europe, America and Australia, among other places. The one in Nigeria is being organised by the Association of Nigerian Authors in conjunction with writer and physician Dr  Wale Okediran.

Copyright PUNCH.

Things Fall Apart’ at 60, by Isa Sanusi


Things Fall Apart’ at 60, by Isa Sanusi


Daily Nigerian January 9, 2018  Isa Sanusi

‘Things Fall Apart’ is a by-word for modern African fiction. There are many plans across academia and literary circles, all over the world to celebrate 60 years of this ‘great African’ novel. But before we celebrate the work, let us also celebrate the author who is largely considered as the father of modern African literature.

Chinua Achebe is a writer whose name is familiar across world. In fact, many in some parts of the world came to know about Nigeria after coming across the works of Achebe. His works laid the foundation that gave African literature a direction. Some writers and critics consider ‘Things Fall Apart’ as the most outstanding work by Achebe. But Achebe himself rather considered ‘Arrow of God’ as his favourite. Even fierce ‘orientalists’ acknowledged the pioneering role of ‘Things Fall Apart.’ In a more severe criticism V.S Naipaul was quoted as saying something like, ‘Things Fall Apart’ was the only book Chinua Achebe wrote. Naipaul was implying that in his own view, all the works of Achebe that followed ‘Things Fall Apart’ have no worthy artistic qualities.

All the statistics favoured this novel published in 1958. Over 20 million copies have been sold and it never runs out of print. It has been translated into more than 50 languages. It is studied worldwide in language, literature, history and anthropology. ‘Things Fall Apart’ was on the Time Magazine’s list of 100 Best English-language Novels from 1923 to 2005. It perpetually appears on all kind of lists including the one called ‘100 Books to read before you die.’

The theme(s), the plot, and imagery of ‘Things Fall Apart’ need no introduction. Okonkwo is so familiar that people often spot his type in their societies. The tragic end of a strong man, trying all his life to distance himself from the shadow of his lazy, nonentity and chronic-debtor father is strongly poignant by all standards. While Okonkwo was flexing muscles and confronting the ‘white man’ and his power his people were cheering him up and encouraging him to go further. But when he committed the murder that was to be his nemesis the very people cheering him up to teach ‘white man a lesson’ started asking: why did he do it?  Okonkwo held sway at home with the firmness of a dictator. He lived on the notion that use of force can make things easy and possible. He sees life perpetually as a wrestling that he must emerge the winner. Okwonkwo’s eldest son Nwoye lived with constant severe beating for showing traits of the laziness of his grandfather. The killing of Ikemefuna, as required by tradition was so painful that even the strongman in Okonkwo struggled through it. 

Through The District Commissioner we saw racism and arrogant assumption that simplifies culture and traditions of the ‘conquered.’ Okonkwo doesn’t want to be seen as weak or feminine. Ironically, for a man who does many harmful things so that he will not be considered a ‘woman’ his favourite child is Ezinma – a girl. Obierika a close friend of Okonkwo is a figure of moderation; often questioning some traditions. Almost every character in this novel brings out more than the bitter encounter between primitive African society east of the Niger and the civilizing missionaries from Victorian court. There was a lesson in the consequences of ‘fear.’ There was a lesson in the danger of taking actions at the prompting of cheering crowd. They can abandon you at the critical hour. There is a lesson in the consequences of following traditions without questioning them – where necessary. 

Falling ‘from grace to grass’ can happen as a result of a single decision or action.

Over the years ‘Things Fall Apart’ has been receiving reviews and criticism with varied perspectives. Some critics consider it a work not really judged for its quality but for its ‘representation.’ It came onto the literary stage at a point in time when the western world was looking for anything, just anything to give them an idea of what African societies look. Achebe benefitted from that yearning – that vacuum with ‘Things Fall Apart.’ Many supported this argument by pointing out that majority of praises for the novel are based not on its artistic qualities but on the penchant for the exotic; the story of turmoil in an African village at the dawn of colonial conquest.

The ability of Achebe (or is it mastery) made it look effortless to transfer thought and symbolism from Igbo to English. Largely, one would not need a dictionary to progress from beginning to the end of the novel. The clarity and narrative coherence are both captivating and precise. The novel is full of Igbo proverbs and imagery that found fitting equivalents in English language.

At 60 ‘Things Fall Apart’ raises questions about the relationship between the weak and the powerful, between destiny and expectations of the society on individuals. It also stands as a chronicle of the chaos that permeated many African societies at the dawn of colonial exploits. What can happen to a society stuck in traditions; oblivious of the inevitable need to change and make progress? Is it reasonable to be hostile to anything ‘new’ or ‘strange’?

Celebrating ‘Things Fall Apart’ at 60 is also a good moment of contemplation on WB Yeats “Second Coming” (1919) Each line may appear as if it was composed this year, or perhaps last year:

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;

Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world

https://dailynigerian.com/things-fall-apart-at-60-by-isa-sanusi/

Things Fall Apart Is 60


Things Fall Apart Is 60 
                                     


Six decades after its publication, Things Fall Apart remains the novel to beat. This is not just in Africa where it towers ahead of many others, but also all over the world where its influence continues to grow. It is thus not surprising that different continents are gearing up for the Diamond celebration of the first novel of the legendary writer, Chinua Achebe.

At the head of the celebration is the Christy and Chinua Achebe Foundation, working with various institutions. According to a former President of the Association of Nigerian Authors, Dr. Wale Okediran, the project will hold between February and December.

He noted that the foundation was working with ANA, with activities scheduled to hold in Lagos, Ibadan, Abuja, Sokoto and the grand finale at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

A five-man Africa Organising Committee, headed by Okediran, will oversee the organisation of the event in Nigeria and other African countries. Okediran feels elated that fellows of the Ebedi Residency Programme, which he founded about a decade ago, are in different African countries and are ready to be part of the organisation in their respective domains.

Okediran went on to say “Reactions from the African countries have been very encouraging. They even want to outdo one another. It is the first time we are taking the celebration out of Nigeria. Some people have asked, ‘Why are we still doing this?’ The fact is that we want to keep the literary flame aglow. We want to show that literature equally matters. Life is not just about politics. It is as important as the economy or cattle colony. We don’t want them to submerge us.

“So, in the Achebe celebration, literature is the focus. We are celebrating Achebe because of the impact he made on the development of African literature and beyond. We want to show others that if you do your work well as a writer, literature will outlive you. Of course, there is also the need to make the point that even if politics and religion are dividing us, literature is uniting us.”

Also, a colloquium will hold in Nigeria from February to August 2018 while other African countries will fix their own celebration.

http://www.herald.ng/things-fall-apart-is-60/

A Look Back at Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart for its 60th Anniversary


A Look Back at Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart for its 60th Anniversary


Things Fall Apart helped introduce African literature to the world (along with Amos Tutuola’s Palm Wine Drinkard), and has become a classic of global literature and a fixture in the western canon. But if you haven’t read it, you might hear it reduced by short description to a simple fable about the horrors of colonialism destroying halcyon life among primitive people.

So I was surprised, reading it last month, that the first two-thirds of the book has no mention of the missionaries that will arrive in later chapters. And what we find in the story before the first signs of colonialism is not a simple, lovely life. It’s a complicated, rich portrait of a culture that operates by customs and laws that are, to say the least, hard to accept. The protagonist Okonkwo beats his wives and children. Infant twins, thought to be evil, are left for dead in a haunted forest. Other babies who are thought to be possessed are mutilated before being killed so that if they return they can be identified by their marks. Members of the village are killed because an oracle, with no explanation, says it must be so.

But the easy interpretation of Things Fall Apart is that life before colonialism was pure, and that the arrival of the missionaries made everything go south, so Achebe’s unflinching depiction of the violence in the Igbo culture (rebranded “Ibo” in the novel) seems to be often overlooked. This is true for positive capsule reviews and for critics alike. As the New York Times obituary of Achebe pointed out, the author wrote in his memoir Home and Exile that “an offended and highly critical English reviewer in a London Sunday paper titled her piece cleverly, I must admit, ‘Hurray to Mere Anarchy!’”

But Things Fall Apart is so much more complicated. Even in its quiet moments, Achebe captures the feeling of a magical life before the invasion of colonialism intersecting with a menacing undercurrent of fear:

The night was very quiet. It was always quiet except on moonlight nights. Darkness held a vague terror for these people, even the bravest among them. Children were warned not to whistle at night for fear of evil spirits. Dangerous animals became even more sinister and uncanny in the dark. A snake was never called by its name at night because it would hear. It was called a string.

http://www.signature-reads.com/2018/04/look-back-chinua-achebe-things-fall-apart-60th-anniversary/