“Girls at War and Other Stories,” by Chinua Achebe, 1973
Achebe is
in a group of older African novelists well known in the ‘West’ – Amos Tutuola,
Ousmane Sembane, Nadine Gordimer, Ben Okri, Wole Soyinka and Ngugi wa Thiong’o. Achebe is probably the most celebrated for
his novel Things Fall Apart which
details the effects of colonialism on Nigerians and traditional Ibo culture. The stories in this collection were written
over a period of time, some when he was only in secondary school. They show the
conflict between ‘modern’ ways of doing things and the cultural reality of most
Nigerians. A few of the stories,
including the title one, reflect the Biafran war for independence, where Achebe
was Minister of Culture.
For the
modern urban reader, these somewhat dated stories smack of many prior and
negative African stereotypes. As such
they are a bit sad to read but then they mirror events even in advanced
capitalist societies. These are stories
of village and market town life, not of the big Nigerian cities. People live in huts. For the rich there are multiple wives. Palm wine is the local intoxicant. Two corrupt parties with almost identical
acronyms vie for power. Buying votes is de riguer, as no one believes anything
much anymore. White Christian missionaries
force their ideas on the locals and some locals take them up. Naked madmen walk
the dirt roads. Those who marry those
their family do not like are outcast.
Herbalists, or ‘medicine men’ provide health care, including dumping
patients in ‘the bad bush.’ Superstition,
magic and terror reign in multiple ways, such as sleeping with ghosts. One story involves an addiction to a rare
substance - sugar. Schooling is only for
the rich. The village priest is not to
be crossed.
The best
stories are the war ones. One is about a
man who luckily gets his bicycle back and is able to make a living after the
war. He is assaulted by thieves who
steal a stipend paid by the government, yet carries on because money is not
everything. Another is the title story
about a young Biafran woman who joins the armed rebellion, then after a few
years ends up as a consort to a rich powerful man just to survive. It involves another government official who
tries to take her under his wing, but also to steal her from the other man. All ends tragically.
Prior
reviews on African literature and issues below, use blog search box, upper
left: “Famished Road,” “Black Panther,” “Searching for Sugar Man,” “Mandela,
Obama, Castro & Kennedy,” “FGM,” “Monsters of the Market,” “American
Exceptionalism,” “The Dream of the Celt,” “The Race for What’s Left,” “Last
Train to Zona Verde.”
And I
bought it a May Day’s excellent used and cut-out section!
The
Cultural Marxist
January 3,
2020
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