[GIST] Why Chinua Achebe is One of the World’s Most Important Modern Writers
Why Chinua Achebe is One of the World’s Most Important Modern Writers
Chinua Achebe
The late Nigerian author Chinua Achebe has been honoured in a
Google Doodle, underscoring his status as a towering figure of 20th
century literature.
By creating a doodle marking what would have been Achebe’s 87th
birthday, the tech giant is celebrating a writer many consider to be
father of modern African literature.
Writing amid a post-colonial movement that saw African nations cast
off decades of foreign rule and seek political sovereignty, Mr Achebe
lent a voice to a generation of Africans who refused to be defined
solely through the lenses of European thought.
Part of that work involved telling distinctly African stories from
the perspective of African characters, helping to forge a literature
that — like newly created countries — was independent from Europe.
Mr Achebe did so across dozens of novels and books of poetry and
essays, leading many to refer to him as “the father of modern African
literature”. He died in March of 2013 at the age of 82, having collected
accolades that included the Man Booker International Prize.
His oeuvre stood in deliberate opposition to works of European
literature that cast Africa as a setting and its people as bit players
in the central affairs of Western characters. He denounced novelist
Joseph Conrad as a “bloody racist” and called Mr Conrad’s novel “Heart
of Darkness”, in which a European explorer plunges into a threatening
and unfathomable Africa, as “a totally deplorable book”.
In contrast to European works that allowed Africans only minor or
one-dimensional roles, Mr Achebe wrote novels that showed Nigerians as
complex characters endowed with agency.
His best-known work, “Things Fall Apart,” remains a staple of
school curricula. It tells the story of Okonkwo, the proud leader of his
village.
The novel depicts the complex customs of the Igbo people, one of
multiple ethnic groups in Nigeria with a distinct culture and language.
The book portrays how Okonkwo’s world is upended by the appearance
of Christian missionaries, and its closing paragraph — written from the
perspective of a recently arrived colonial leader — functions as a
haunting allusion to how European observers reduce and dismiss complex
African cultures:
“He had already chosen the title of the book, after much thought: The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger.”
Watch the biography video below:
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