CHINUA ACHEBE: Teacher of Light
CHINUA ACHEBE: Teacher of Light
Author(s): Tijan M. Sallah & Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Edited By Tijan M. Sallah & Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Purchase: USD $21.95
Type: Book
Language: English
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: N/A
Content:: Non Academic
Source: African World Press
Timeline: The Contemporary Age - From 1789 to 2011
Published: 2019
Description
Born in Ogidi, southeastern Nigeria, on November 16, 1940, Chinua Achebe has become one of the world's leading fiction writers. He is a fascinating writer, whose life is of the stuff that makes fiction. Growing up in the cultural crossroads of colonial Nigeria, he lived and mediated in a world in which his people moved between allegiance to traditional Igbo beliefs and values and those introduced by the British colonialism, particularly Anglican Christianity under the Church Missionary Society.
Achebe's father was a zealous Anglican missionary, who was nicknamed Nineteen-Four, referring to the start of his missionary journeys in Nigeria in 1904. On the other hand, Achebe's uncle, Udo Osinyi, was a die-hard Igbo, who stuck to traditional religion. It is said that he once ordered missionaries singing choir songs in his yard to leave, stating Your singing is too sad to come from a man's house. My neighbors might think it was my funeral dirge." This tension-filled life at societal crossroads would inspire such Achebe classics as "Things Fall Apart," which dramatizes the disintegration of traditional society with the coming of the white man and the unsuccessful mobilization of native resistance.
Written in simple, straightforward Achebe-style English, this book is about Chinua Achebe's life story, starting from his formative years with his family in Ogidi to his development as a writer at the pioneer institution, University College Ibadan, his role in the Nigeria Civil War with the Biafran cause and his witness of horrific tragedy, his eventual immersion into literary and political controversy, and finally to his enduring spirit and challenging vision of great hope for Nigeria and Africa.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
TIJAN M. SALLAH was a professor of economics at several US universities and now works for the World Bank. His works have appeared in major African short story and poetry anthologies, and he has published three collections of poetry, most recently, "Dreams of Dusty Roads" and an ethnography titled "Wolof." He is the editor of two anthologies, "New Poets of West Africa" and "The New African Poetry" (with Tanure Ojaide).
NGOZI OKONJO-IWEALA joined the World Bank in February 1982 and is presently the director of Operations, Middle East and North Africa Region. She has published several papers in development journals, most recently. The Impact of the East Asian Financial Crisis on Laos and Cambodia, which she co-authored with Bank colleagues. She is currently co-editing a book titled "The Debt Trap in Nigeria."