Things Fall Apart@60: Why we’re celebrating in 11
African countries —Okediran
February 18, 2018
The global celebration of the
Diamond Jubilee of the late Professor Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart has
commenced with activities planned for five Nigerian cities and 10 African
countries.
SHAKESPEARE has been dead for over
100 years but he’s still celebrated in the UK. In fact, there’s a thriving
tourism industry around him. If you go to his birthplace, Warwickshire, day and
night, you will find tourists there. If that can be done for him, what stops us
from doing same for Achebe and other literary icons,” Chair, Local Organising
Committee of the Things Fall Apart @ 60 celebrations in Nigeria, Dr. Wale
Okediran, began at a news briefing last week in Lagos.
Okediran, who was unveiling plans
for the Diamond Jubilee of the novel that has been translated into over 45
languages, was responding to a question on why 10 years after a five-city tour
of Nigeria in commemoration of its Golden Jubilee, the drums, were being rolled
out again.
He continued: “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.”
Fittingly, the African leg of the
global celebration being spearheaded by the Christie and Chinua Achebe
Foundation is not happening only in Nigeria this time; 10 other African
countries are also celebrating the novel first published in 1958 by William
Heinemann Ltd in the UK. Ghana, Ivory Coast, South Africa, Sierra Leone,
Uganda, Kenya, Liberia, Tanzania, Togo and Cameroon, all have activities lined
up between February and December 2018.
Giving a breakdown of the activities
happening in Nigeria, the head of a five-person organising committee, disclosed
that the celebration was themed: Things Fall Apart: 60 years on and will take
place in five cities. These are Lagos, Ibadan, Abuja, Sokoto and the University
of Nigeria, Nsukka, for the grand finale.
Symposia, children’s carnival,
writing competition, stage presentations of Things Fall Apart and a grand
finale with a night of tributes are some of the key events taking place. He
further explained that the colloquium would take place in the five Nigerian
cities and 10 African countries.
“Apart from foreign writers and
scholars, notable African based writers and scholars will also be invited to
present papers and talks,” Okediran said, adding that copies of Things Fall
Apart would be provided for pupils participating in the literary competition.
“The competition will be organised
with the provision of copies of Things Fall Apart for the students to read for
one month before the day. The competition will involve a quiz, reading comprehension
and one-act dramatic enactment of any part of the book by participating
schools.”
He explained that in Nigeria,
collaborations would be done with the Association of Nigerian Authors at the
national level and through its local branches where the events are billed to
hold as well as tertiary institutions.
On preparations in other African
countries, Okediran said: “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.” He added that Fellows of the Ebedi
Residency scattered around the continent had been helpful in the preparations.
For the international conference, he
invited abstracts for 15-20-minute presentations and explained that it would be
a platform for students, writers, scholars, literary critics and other
interested parties to engage, rethink and propose possible new directions for
African literature after 60 years of Things Fall Apart.
Some of the sub-themes include
Conflict Generation and Resolution in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, African
Literature after Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, The Achebe Spirit in the Emergence
of Modern African Literature, Managing Changes and Transitions in a Pluralised
Society: Achebe’s Things Fall Apart in Reference and Africa at the Crossroads
of Development and Good Governance: What Has Literature Got To Do With It?
http://www.tribuneonlineng.com/things-fall-apart60-celebrating-11-african-countries-okediran/
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