Ekwensi certainly one of Africa's most prolific writers who died late final yr and was buried early this yr, maintained a vibrant writing exercise all through his life, publishing a set of quick tales, Money On Supply, his final work of fiction and finishing work on his memoirs, titled, In My Time for a number of years on to his loss of life. With over twenty novels, collections of tales and quick novels to his title, Ekwensi's thematic preoccupation equally coated the Nigerian Civil Battle from the attitude of a journalist and life in a pastoral Fulani setting in Northern Nigeria.
Ekwensi's first revealed work was the novella, When Love Whispers, revealed in 1948, ten years earlier than the nice African novel, Achebe's Issues Fall Aside, appeared in London. He was impressed by sorrow over his unsuccessful try and court docket a younger lady whose father insisted that she makes a wedding of comfort to jot down it. This quick, mild romance fashioned a part of what turned referred to as the Onitsha Market college of pulp fiction, and its success impressed Ekwensi to proceed in that similar mode.
Ekwensi had already distinguished himself by the a number of quick tales he had written for broadcast on radio. These he later put collectively, inside ten days, whereas on his method to Chelsea Faculty of Pharmacy, London, to comprehend his first novel, Folks of the Metropolis, which Nigeria's premier newspaper, The Each day Instances, revealed in installments earlier than it appeared in e-book kind in 1954. however which was not revealed in america till 15 years later. Folks of the Metropolis (1954) was the primary West African novel in fashionable type English to be revealed in England. It is publication thus marked an vital growth in African literature with Ekwensi changing into one of many first African novelists to obtain a lot publicity within the West and ultimately essentially the most prolific African novelist.
The truth that Cyprian Ekwensi began his writing profession as a pamphleteer is mirrored within the episodic nature of Folks of the Metropolis (1954) a set of tales strung collectively however studying like a novel, by which he offers a vibrant portrait of the fast-paced life in a West African metropolis, Lagos. Folks of the Metropolis which recounts the approaching to political consciousness of a younger reporter and band chief in an rising African nation is stuffed together with his operating commentary on the issues of bribery and corruption and despotism bedeviling such states. In it and a number of other others, Ekwensi explores the lure, thrills and challenges of city life, and the intense permissiveness and impersonal relationships permeating the lives of migrants to town, the place close-ties usually fostered by the prolonged household system of their conventional societies represent a critical examine on the deviant life that discover full expression within the metropolis.
In line with, Bernth Lindfors, none of Ekwensi's quite a few works is solely free from amateurish blots and blunders. Lindfors subsequently concludes that he couldn't name any "the handiwork of a cautious, expert craftsman." On his portrayal of the ethical irresponsibility in metropolis life, Bernth Lindfors, argued that "as a result of his sinful heroines often come to dangerous ends, Ekwensi could be seen as a critical moralist whose novels provide instruction in advantage by displaying the tragic penalties of vice. Nevertheless it all the time appears as if he's extra within the vice than within the advantage and that he goals to titillate in addition to train." Whereas this view could also be contested, it's plain that he all the time strove arduous to succeed in his viewers in essentially the most speedy and intimate type. Certainly, it was to keep up this that he clung to these themes that afforded him the mass readership he a lot craved
In a 1972 interview by Lewis Nkosi, Ekwensi outlined his function as author thus: "I feel I'm a author who regards himself as a author for the plenty. I do not consider myself as a literary stylist: if my type comes, that's simply incidental, however I'm extra taken with getting on the coronary heart of the reality which the person on the street can acknowledge than in simply spinning phrases."
Ernest Emenyonu, a Nigerian critic famous for his sympathy in the direction of Ekwensi, costs that Ekwensi "has by no means been appropriately assessed as a author."
One other sympathetic critic,the long-standing American convert to the examine of African Literature, Charles Larson, describes him as one of the prolific African writers of the 20 th century. In line with Larson, Ekwensi "might be essentially the most widely-read novelist in Nigeria--perhaps even in West Africa--by readers whose literary tastes haven't been uncovered to the extra complicated writings of Chinua Achebe and different extra expert African novelists."
Kole Omotoso previous President of Nigerian Affiliation of Authors and Drama professor at College of Ibadan confessed a lifelong fascination with him after studying his novelette The Yaba Spherical about Homicide as a toddler, for, as he confesses, it taught him the significance of house in writing fiction. Omotoso goes on to state that Ekwensi's main significance in Nigerian writing is as a result of he believed in himself and 'made us imagine in ourselves.' The pan-Africanist slant of his writings and his publications being largely in Nigeria had been discovered commendable. When many different African writers had been in self-exile, he selected to stay in his native nation, slightly than reside overseas the place publishing alternatives are extra ample.
Whereas some students discounted Ekwensi's novels, others valued their social realism. Charles R. Larson put his work in historic perspective: "Native colour is their forte, whether or not it's Ekwensi's metropolis of chaos, Lagos, or Onitsha ... ; the Nigerian reader is positioned for the primary time in a perspective which has been beforehand unexplored in African fiction."
Inserting Ekwensi's work firmly within the widespread idiom, Douglas Killam defined their significance: "Well-liked fiction is all the time vital as indicating present widespread pursuits and morality. Ekwensi's work is redeemed (though not saved as artwork) by his critical concern with the ethical points which inform up to date Nigerian life. As such they may all the time be related to Nigerian literary historical past and to Nigerian custom."
Ekwensi advised tales that, like well-cooked onugbu (bitter leaf) soup, left a pleasing after-meal tang on the palate. Via his works Ekwensi advised us work of fiction doesn't deserve that honourable title if it doesn't at first sight-...-arrest the reader like a cop's handcuffs..... I learn lots of Ekwensi's books, and save for 'The Drummer Boy', which was a beneficial textual content after I was in junior secondary college in Plateau State, the others had been learn as a result of they're what a book-hungry soul wants for sustenance. Who can, having been initiated into the cult of Ekwensi, overlook the revenge-driven Mallam Iliya, the sokugo-stricken Mai Sunsaye, the skirt-besotted Amusa Sango, the raunchy belle, Jagua Nana (they do not create ladies like that any extra, whether or not in fiction, on the telly, and possibly in actual life); and the heart-rending Ngozi and heroic Pedro? They're my associates for all times.
Ekwensi did far more than create 'airport thrillers'. He advised nice tales that reside on within the hearts of all who encountered them. ( Henry Chukwuemeka Onyeama a Lagos-based author and trainer)
An Ibo, like Chinua Achebe, Ekwensi was born in 1921 in Minna, Niger State, in Northern Nigeria, however attended secondary college in a predominantly Yoruba space, Ibadan. He's very aware of the numerous main ethnic teams in his nation, and thus possesses a data typically effectively exploited in his novels. He went on subsequently to Yaba Larger School in Ibadan after which moved over to Achimota School in Ghana the place he studied forestry. For 2 years he labored as a forestry officer after which taught science for a short interval. He then entered the Lagos Faculty of Pharmacy. He later continued on the College of London (Chelsea Faculty of Pharmacy) throughout which interval he wrote his earliest fiction, his first book-length publication Ikolo the Wrestler and Different Ibo Story (1947) , revealed in London. His writings earned him a spot within the Nationwide Media the place he rose to Head of options within the Nigerian Broadcasting Companies and in the end changing into its Director.
A number of occasions in Ekwensi's childhood contributed later to his writings. Though ethnically an Igbo, he was raised amongst Hausa playmates and schoolmates and so spoke each tribal languages. He additionally realized of his heritage by way of the numerous Igbo tales and legends that his father advised him, which he would later publish within the assortment Ikolo the Wrestler and Different Ibo Tales. In 1936 Ekwensi enrolled within the southern Nigerian secondary college referred to as Authorities School, Ibadan, the place he realized about Yoruba tradition in addition to excelling in English, math, science, and sports activities. He learn every thing he may lay his arms on within the college library, concentrating on H. Rider Haggard, Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, Walter Scott, and Alexandre Dumas. He additionally wrote articles and tales for quite a few college publications, notably The Viking journal.
In the course of the later a part of his stint as a forest officer Ekwensi began craving for town. So starting in 1947 he taught English, biology, and chemistry at Igbobi School close to Lagos. To his lessons he learn aloud manuscripts of books for youngsters, Drummer Boy, Passport of Mallam Ilia, and Bother in From Six, and quick tales. Lastly, after a long time of supplementing his writing profession by working in broadcasting and doing different public relations work, Ekwensi gave up his day jobs in 1984 to pursue writing full time. He returned to writing grownup novels, selecting and selecting from his private "archive" of earlier written manuscripts a lot of which he revised into the novels Jagua Nana's Daughter, Motherless Child, For a Roll of Parchment, and Divided We Stand, which had been revealed within the 1980s. For instance, in For a Roll of Parchment he recounted his journey from Nigeria to England, as he had in Folks of the Metropolis. He did, nevertheless, replace his materials to painting post-World Battle II Nigeria, with its quicker paced life.
Intercourse, violence, intrigue, and thriller in a recognizable up to date setting most frequently within the fast-paced melting pot of town had been frequent weight-reduction plan in Ekwensi's works particularly in Jagua Nana, by which a really worldly and extremely engaging forty-five yr previous Nigerian lady with a number of suitors falls in love with a younger trainer, Freddie. She agrees to ship him to check legislation in England on the understanding of their getting married on his return. Round this lovely and spectacular prostitute, Ekwensi units in movement a complete panoply of vibrant, amoral characters who've drifted from their rural origins to seize the dazzling pleasures of town.
And the novel itself reveals us the seedy underbelly of the massive metropolis, Lagos, the place Jagua's favorite hang-out, the Tropicana bar, units the scene for a lot of the story.
Someday, again within the 1950s the Onitsha Market 'literary' mafia, strarted producing and advertising brazenly, a semi-nude image of a buxom Igbo teenage magnificence, with the sassy caption, "Beateam mee lee" - I dare you to beat me!
These had been the prudish days of excessive ethical values in Igboland and certainly Nigeria , of Elizabethan vogue with cane-wielding main college lecturers and headmasters. The offending image despatched shockwaves proper down the spines of the general public who, nonetheless, rushed to purchase copies. Males who turned up their noses on the photos in public, secretly purchased, seen and relished copies. And..college boys did odd jobs for folks, and the cash they earned had been saved as much as the one shilling price of the image, which they used to buy it after which often tucked it away, in-between books, away from the prying eyes of fogeys or the category trainer, from the place curious peeks of the treasure could possibly be sneeked often, at its proprietor's danger, even in the midst of a lesson. Famous for churning out almanacs, with photos of the well-known, unfolding occasions, folks artwork, in addition to such literature as these of Ogali A. Ogali, writer of the legendary "Veronica My Daughter", the mafia knew the place to attract the road. Intercourse, nevertheless, offered any day and age and the mafia knew this. However no one wished to be recognized with something even remotely pornographic. "Beateam mee lee" was subsequently, on the time, the mom of all daring.
It was in opposition to this backdrop that Ekwensi took the Nigerian literary scene by storm with the publication of the raunchy Jagua Nana. Ekwensi's most generally learn novel, Jagua Nana, revealed in 1961 returned us to the locale of Folks of the Metropolis however with a way more cohesive plot centered on Jagua, a courtesan who had a love for the costly as mirrored in her title itself, which was a corruption of the costly English car, Jaguar. Her life personalizes the battle between the previous conventional and fashionable city Africa. Though Ekwensi had earlier proven the path of his works with the publication, in 1954, of Folks of the Metropolis, it was Jagua (the lead character on this novel) that constructed the Ekwensi legend and assumed a life all its personal, changing into a folks hero of kinds. Jagua dared the studying public. Ekwensi the artist, additionally had the magic of selecting out names of his characters that had been on the spot hits. They caught like glue within the reader's reminiscence and helped animate the fictional persona. Daring, defiant, imaginative and rendered with unusual technical finesse, Jaguar Nana completely established Ekwensi as the last word chronicler of Nigerian metropolis life.
Revealed in 1961, the novel Jagua Nana, tells the story of an growing older prostitute named Jagua who tries to offer for herself safety in her later life by way of her relationship with a youthful man. But whereas this younger man is finding out legislation in England, Jagua includes herself in varied actions, some doubtful, some not. Jagua Nana, witnessed some enchancment in plot high quality and management, in contrast to what obtained in Folks Of The Metropolis, chronicling the adventures of an ageing prostitute in Lagos, in love along with her work and the costly life, however who results in grief and disappointment.
Ekwensi's try and mud her up later and usher her into some type of happiness and success introduces the search motif in his work, which manifests itself totally within the sequel, Jagua Nana's Daughter (1987), the place Jagua, after a protracted search, was in a position to reconnect along with her educated, socially elevated daughter, who had additionally had her personal justifiable share of free life. Each daughter and mom had been on the similar time engrossed in a quest for mutual success and therapeutic till they met fortuitously. In the long run, after she suffers sufficiently, Ekwensi permits her to have happiness.
As was to be in a number of of his different novels, Ekwensi's moralizing is clear and reform is feasible for some characters. For instance, within the later novel Iska Ekwensi portrayed a younger Ibo widow, Filia, who strikes to Lagos after her husband's loss of life. There she tries to guide a decent life. Whereas she tries to get an training and accountable employment, she encounters quite a few obstacles, which permit Ekwensi to indicate readers a variety of urbanites. But this novel, revealed by a European press, couldn't compete for reputation with its predecessor, Jagua Nana, which prompted controversy for its frank portrayal of sexuality. When an Italian film firm wished to movie Jagua Nana, the Nigerian authorities prevented this effort fearing detrimental media portrayals of the nation.
Speaking about what impressed him to jot down the work in an interview, Ekwensi mentioned: I used to be a pharmacy scholar on the Yaba Larger School these days and I lived in the identical compound with a younger man who was very romantic. He would by no means miss his evening membership for something. We had an evening membership then, known as Rex Membership, run by the late Rewane - the 2 Rewanes are useless now, by the best way and certainly one of them was at Authorities School, Ibadan whereas the opposite one was a politician.
Now, a few years later, I used to be known as upon to do a programme for the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) about evening life and I came upon that I had a lot materials about this topic that I may actually construct it into a complete e-book. That was the inspiration.
Yet one more of his novels is Burning Grass (1961) a set of vignettes giving perception into the lifetime of a pastoral Fulani cattlemen household of Northern Nigeria..The novel and the characters are primarily based truly on an actual household with whom Ekwensi himself had beforehand lived. For after finding out forestry on the Yaba Larger School in Lagos throughout World Battle II, Ekwensi started a two-year stint as a forestry officer which familiarized him with the forest reserves,from which he was enabled to jot down such journey tales in rural settings as Burning Grass..
"Within the days within the forest, I used to be in a position to reminisce and write. That was after I actually started to jot down for publishing," he advised Nkosi. The a number of months spent with the nomadic Fulani individuals, later turned the topics of Burning Grass.the place he follows the adventures of Mai Sunsaye, who has Sokugo, a wanderlust, and of his household, who attempt to rescue him. Whereas seeing his protagonists by way of diverse adventures, Ekwensi portrays the lives of the Fulani cattlemen. This early work, thought-about certainly one of his extra "critical" novels, was revealed by Heinemann instructional publishers and reissued in 1998
Two novellas for youngsters adopted in 1960; each The Drummer Boy and The Passport of Mallam Ilia which had been workout routines in mixing conventional themes with undisguised romanticism.
Between 1961 and 1966 Ekwensi revealed at the least one main work yearly. Crucial of those had been the novels, Stunning Feathers (1963) and Iska (1966), and two collections of quick tales, Rainmaker (1965) and Lokotown (1966).
Stunning Feathers (1963) displays the nationalist and pan-Africanist consciousness of the pre-independence days of the 1950s and the way the younger hero's youthful dedication to his ultimate results in the disintegration of his household, thus underscoring the proverb alluded to within the title: "nevertheless well-known a person is exterior, if he's not revered inside his own residence he is sort of a chicken with lovely feathers, great on the skin however strange inside."
From 1967 to 1969, throughout the Nigerian civil warfare, when the jap a part of Nigeria tried to secede, Ekwensi served as a authorities info officer the experiences from which he used to jot down the 1976 picaresque novel Survive the Peace. which realistically portrayed the actions of a radio journalist within the wake of the civil warfare in Biafra.who in his effort to reunite his household, encounters the violence, destruction, refugees, and aid operations that such chaos engenders. Via flashbacks, Ekwensi additionally depicts the warfare itself giving a autopsy on the just-concluded , interrogates the issues of surviving within the so-called peace. It appears to be like as an illustration on the pathetic destiny of James Odugo, the radio journalist who survives the warfare solely to be lower down on the highway by marauding former troopers.
In such early works because the collections Ikolo the Wrestler and Different Ibo Tales, and An African Evening's Leisure, the novel Burning Grass, and the juvenile works The Leopard's Claw and Juju Rock, Ekwensi advised tales in a rural setting.
Ekwensi continued to publish past the 1960s, and amongst his later works are the novel Divided We Stand (1980) by which he lampooned the Nigerian civil warfare, the novella Motherless Child (1980), and The Stressed Metropolis and Christmas Gold (1975), Behind the Convent Wall (1987), and Gone to Mecca (1991).
Ekwensi additionally revealed quite a few works for youngsters.reminiscent of Ikolo the Wrestler and Different Ibo Tales (1947) and The Leopard's Claw (1950). Within the 1960s, he wrote An African Evening's Leisure (1962), The Nice Elephant-Chicken (1965), and Bother in Type Six (1966). Over time, Ekwensi produced different books, largely for youngsters, which although they could not have been internationally acclaimed, had been nonetheless well-known and browse throughout Nigeria and Africa. They included Rainmaker (1965), Iska (1966), Coal Camp Boy (1971) Samankwe within the unusual Forest (1973), Motherless Child (1980), The Stressed Metropolis and Christmas Gold (1975), Samankwe and the Freeway Robbers (1975), Behind the Convent Wall (1987), Gone to Mecca (1991), Masquerade Time! (1992), and King Perpetually! (1992). In 2006, he accomplished work on two different books; "Tortoise and the Brown Monkey", a brief story and "One other Freedom".
Gratifyingly Ekwensi continues to be writing, He has revealed a number of titles as When Love Whispers, Divided We Stand, Jagua Nana's Daughter and King for Ever! all associated to earlier works.
When Love Whispers like Jagua Nana revolves round a really engaging lady with a number of suitors. However while she thinks she has received the love of her life her father expects her to get married to an older man in an organized marriage.
Divided We Stand (1980) was written within the warmth of the Biafra warfare itself, although revealed later. It reverses the obtained knowledge that unity is power, exhibiting how ethnicity, division, and hatred result in mistrust, displacement, and warfare itself.
Jagua Nana's Daughter (1986) revolves round Jagua's daughter's traumatic seek for her mom main her to search out not solely her mom however a accomplice as effectively. She is ready to get married to a extremely positioned skilled as she, in contrast to her mom, is knowledgeable as effectively. She thus positive aspects the safety and safety she needs.
King for Ever! (1992) satirises the need of African leaders to perpetuate themselves in energy. Sinanda's rising to energy from humble background doesn't forestall his vaulting ambition from hovering to the peak the place he was now aspiring to godhead
Within the a long time since Ekwensi started writing, the Nigerian readership has modified. Not like the times of the Onitsha Market fiction, when books had been printed inexpensively and offered cheaply to swimsuit widespread tastes on the flip of the millennium few publishing firms managed the selection of books revealed; e-book costs made books typically transcend the attain of the plenty, restricted largely to varsities and libraries, which cater to nonfiction and educational supplies. With varied types of media growing in reputation, the inducement to learn has fallen. With fewer individuals studying for pleasure, novels are in little demand. Due to these circumstances, artistic writers endure. Of this draw back, Ekwensi advised Larson, "Journalists thrive right here, however artistic writers get diverted and the creativity will get washed out of them if they have to take the bread and butter residence."
At a public lecture in 2000, quoted by Kole Ade-Odutola in Africa Information, the aged however nonetheless vivacious Ekwensi expressed his want to "construct and nurture younger minds within the customs and traditions of their communities" by way of his writings. He defined, "African writers of the 20 th century inherited the oral literature of our ancestors, and constructing on that, positioned on the centre-stage of their fiction, the values by which we as Africans had lived for hundreds of years. It's these values that make us the Africans that we are--distinguishing between good and evil, justice and injustice, oppression and freedom." In tune with the instances, he had began self-publishing his writings on the Web. Regardless of the vagaries of the African publishing world, at age 80 Ekwensi was nonetheless pursuing his purpose as a result of as he wrote in his essay for The Important Ekwensi 15 years earlier, "The satisfaction I've gained from writing can by no means be quantified."
References
Beier, Ulli ed., Introduction to African Literature (1967);
Breitinger, Eckhard, "Literature for Youthful Readers and Schooling in Multicultural Contexts," in Language and Literature in Multicultural Contexts, edited by Satendra Nandan, Uinveristy of South Pacific, 1983.
· , Quantity 117: Caribbean and Black African Writers, Gale, 1992. Dictionary of Literary Biography
Dathorne, O. R. The Black Thoughts A Historical past of African Literature. Minneapolis: College of Minnesota Press, 1974.
Emenyonu, Ernest, Cyprian Ekwensi. Evans Brothers, 1974.
Emenyonu, Ernest, editor. The Important Ekwensi. Heinemann Instructional Books, 1987.
Larson, Charles R., The Emergence of African Fiction. Indiana College Press, 1971
Larson, Charles R. The Ordeal of the African Author. London: Zed Books, 2001.
Lindfors, Bernth, 'Nigerian Satirist' in ALT5
Laurence, . Margaret Lengthy Drums and Cannons: Nigerian Dramatists and Novelists, 1952-1966 (1968).
Mphahlele, Ezekiel
Palmer Eustace. The Progress of the African Novel. Research in African literature. London: Heinemann, 1979.
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