Ndipe's Posts
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Oh, I see what you mean, using the same classification, adopted by the movie industry will perhaps work. But you get my point right? Rap music, deservedly, has been given a bad name, but why extol the written word that contains the same foul language? Like, what happened to clean literature? I have read Adichie, the heading in her first chapter was just a turn off, like "Could you not have come up with a better word"? |
Certainly not@SMC, how can you know which book contains an atrocious word or not, without reading it? Moreso, with the public outcry against rap music/hiphop, I think the same outcry should be extended to books. |
Even taking a respite in the village, after a periodic stay in town is a boost to your own health. You dont have to go on vacation at exotic places. |
Ugandan wins the Caine Prize. Ugandan wins Caine Prize, 10,000-pound award for African writing The Associated PressPublished: July 9, 2007 E-Mail Article Listen to Article Printer-Friendly 3-Column Format Translate Share Article Text Size LONDON: A young Ugandan is this year's winner of a 10,000 pound prize for African writing, three years after she was a finalist for the award, the judges announced Monday. Monica Arac de Nyeko's short story "Jambula Tree" was the eighth winner of the annual Caine Prize, created in honor of the late Sir Michael Caine, a British businessman with a deep interest in Africa who for almost 25 years chaired the management committee of what is today known as the Man Booker Prize. Arac de Nyeko was shortlisted for the prize in 2004 for another story, "Strange Fruit." Because it recognizes short stories, the 10,000-pound (US$20,000; about €14,000) prize sometimes called the "African Booker" often spotlights younger writers and the concerns of emerging literary trends on the continent. Arac de Nyeko, born in 1979 in Uganda's north, scene of one of the world's longest civil wars, writes of conflict and poverty, but also of love and family. Today in Culture Michael Cera's comedy of raw adolescence Book review: Vie Française 'Sunshine': Danny Boyle's latest visit to a vast new world She writes with a sure touch for simile that brings to mind the best pop songs, packing layers of meaning and emotion into short, sharp phrases. Revenge in "Jambula Tree" is "sweet and salty like grasshoppers seasoned with onion and kamulari — red, red-hot pepper." In "Strange Fruit," a man press ganged by rebels in northern Uganda returns to his wife a convert to the cause, smelling of "gunpowder and decay." Sudanese writer Jamal Mahjoub, chairman of the 2007 Caine judges, praised "Jambula Tree" as "a witty and touching portrait of a community which is affected forever by a love which blossoms between two adolescents." Both the adolescents are women, described with such compassion that their community's unforgiving response when their love is discovered is more shocking than the theme. At a reading day before she was named the Caine Prize winner, Arac de Nyeko summed up "Jambula Tree" simply: "It's a story really about innocence." Arac de Nyeko studied in Uganda and the Netherlands, where she earned a degree in humanitarian assistance. She has taught literature and worked as a humanitarian officer in Italy and Sudan. http://news.google.com/news?um=1&tab=wn&hl=en&q=caine%20prize |
She won the Orange Prize fiction award, not the Nobel prize. |
"You can hop in your car at any hour of the night and share the freeway with numerous other drivers in most parts of the US, whereas Nigerian highways are largely empty at night due to fear of armed robbery ambushes, "police" attacks and unmarked craters or huge tree logs left over from day-time police "check points"." (Jakumo) Ndipe's comment Almost like a culture shock that you can hop on the freeway, and drive comfortably at night, with no fear of being waylaid by robbers. Even when I had a flat tire last month on my way back home, I just did not panic, because with my cell phone, I knew AAA would arrive sooner or later. America truly deserves our kudos for its near reliability in rendering social services to its citizens. |
Mugabe's defenders should come to his defense. I dont know their names, but I have read of their fervent defense of Mugabe's policies in Zimbabwe. |
@Omoge, I read on the internet that "Pilgrim's Progress" is the 2nd bestselling book in the world, after the Holy Bible. Amazing! |
Newera, you got that right. In the past, or even in some periodicals in the country, any foul language is usually not spelled to the end, so I see no reason why publishers should disobey the 'conventional rule' (if there is any) and include those foul words. You know what I mean? I wonder what those novelists would do, if they were invited to read their novels in a public setting and they had to read those foul words in front of the children. Maybe, they might choose to be 'politically correct' and skip the words for the sake of the children, but then again, why include it in the first place? My observation, as you clearly wrote is that Africans have now adopted those words because it is acceptable in the Western literary field. Some Africans too dey do follow follow! |
How about reviving the African Writers series, Orikinla, since you are knowledgeable in the literature industry? |
For those who disbelieve the existence of Jesus Christ in the Old Testament, how would you reconcile the Holy Verses of the Holy Bible that nobody has seen God with the vision that Isaiah experienced when he saw the Lord in Heaven? Who might it be? Of course, it is Jesus Christ that he saw. Read the link that I posted below. Cheers http://gohg.net/articles/sola-scriptura-in-simple-terms/who-did-isaiah-see/ |
I agree with you@Obong, we need to quit looking upto the western world to validate our literature/writing skills. That is the same reasoning that I have proposed that our own African movies should not be judged solely by western standards, or even attempt to diminish its influence, because of western movies. This is modern day colonialism. When people say Achebe has been denied the Nobel Prize, and he is bitter about it, I am like "Why should he even care if he wins the award or not, when his first novel is more popular than some of the contemporary works awarded the prize. Lets start our own prizes. |
You get too much time on your hands to blog, @Orikinla. Either way, your short story is an amazon bestseller. Good job! |
Well, those leaders responsible for the dire state of the nation could be agents of demons. |
Pray to God@Mide, and a Miracle would be on its way. Truthfully, I have been on that path and what God did (and has done for me) has been a very very humbling/moving experience. |
Educating so far from what I read. Do you pay taxes on any gains acquired from your mutual funds investment? |
Na wao, some folks back home are very unreasonable with their demands. Expecting their friend abroad to call and chat with their parents, maids, siblings is too demanding. I sometimes think that sending money home encourages laziness. Look at this, others with no external help are surviving, so why would others solely depend on their relatives, who are striving to make ends meet abroad for their survival? Housing abroad is no joke at all. You pay a lot of money to secure a decent accomodation, that at the end of it all, you wonder if it is worth it. I mean, why pay this colossal amount of money in America, when your family house is lying idly in Nigeria. A former classmate of mine told me that a 'friend' of mine told him that he stopped communicating with me, because our friendship was not benefitting him financially!. Like I was supposed to be his meal ticket in Nigeria. Unbelievable! |
Irrespective of the worth of a house down the road, and me, being a Nigeria, I am inclined to view an abode as a permanent place to live, instead of reaping profits from it, my question is "Where will you spend the night, after a long day at work"? In your car? What if you had a family? I would pick a house, anytime over a house. |
Was a favorite of my dad as a child, but lost the position to my youngest brother (R.I.P) when he was born. I was perhaps my mom's favorite right from college, till when she died. However, my advice, is this: Avoid playing favoritism, it can destroy the familial bond. The Biblical story of Joseph should serve as a reminder, that his happy ending is perhaps, one of the rare types of sibling reconciliation and forgiveness. |
Oil boom, politics shape Africa's future By EDWARD HARRIS, Associated Press Writer Sat Jun 30, 12:08 AM ET PORT HARCOURT, Nigeria - Europe's great powers once scrambled for dominance across vast, underdeveloped African lands rich in raw resources, including the scarlet palm oil used to grease the first cogs of the industrial revolution. ADVERTISEMENT A century later, a new group of nations are competing for a different valuable, viscous material, with Sub-Saharan Africa closing in on the Persian Gulf as the prime overseas supplier of oil to the last remaining superpower. As China and India increasingly prospect for resources here, terrorism concerns rise and the U.S. military seeks a permanent military presence in Africa, the continent has its greatest international influence in decades. Whether Africa can use its newfound might to end its longtime blight is a separate issue. "There's a new dynamic in play" for African nations, says Antony Goldman, an independent risk-analysis consultant based in London. "And the challenge for those countries is how to manage that." ____ An AP analysis of U.S. oil import figures shows the stakes. In 1993, the earliest year for which there are full figures, the main African oil producing countries — Nigeria, Angola, Cameroon, Chad, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon — shipped about 494,000 barrels per day of oil to the United States, data from the official Energy Information Administration show. That's about 7 percent of total U.S. imports. In the same year, the Persian Gulf nations averaged 1.6 million barrels per day, or about one quarter of all U.S. imports. By 2006, sub-Saharan African oil constituted about 18 percent of all U.S. imports, or about 1.8 million barrels per day; the Persian Gulf made up 2.2 million barrels per day, or 21 percent of total daily imports. But the oil producers are among the sickest countries in Africa. While poorer nations such as Senegal, Mali, Liberia, Burundi, Ghana and others have made democratic advancements, the oil countries are still mostly run by weak, or illegitimate leaders. Angola is emerging from one of the continent's longest-running civil wars. Chad, which has only been exporting oil for a few years, is in the depths of one. Chad's crude reaches African export terminals in oil-rich Cameroon, whose president has been in power for a quarter of a century. Next door is Equatorial Guinea, where per-capita gross domestic product boosted by oil revenues is among the highest in the world, while its ranking on the United Nations human-development index is near the bottom. And then there is Nigeria, where the challenges facing Africa, and particularly its petroleum producers, are on desperate display. Nigeria is Africa's biggest producer of oil and among the top three outside suppliers of crude to America. Among the first Europeans to arrive here centuries ago were slave merchants and traders seeking palm oil, which women still produce in Nigeria's crude-rich Niger Delta by crushing bright-crimson, palm-tree kernels on potholed roads outside massive oil installations that belch smoke and flames. Crude oil was first exported from Nigeria in 1958, two years before independence from Britain. Despite the hundreds of billions of dollars of oil revenues — there was another massive oil boom in the 1970s — the country's 140 million people remain desperately poor. Some 70 percent of the population live on less than $2 per day, U.N. figures show. Much of the oil money has been stolen by corrupt leaders or misspent on wasteful government boondoggles. In Nigeria alone, the World Bank estimates about $300 billion of government oil funds can't be accounted for. By contrast, oil-rich Norway has about that same amount in a government-controlled fund where the petroleum surpluses are kept. Norway sits atop the U.N.'s 2006 human development index, which groups social indicators like literacy and infant mortality. Nigeria is among the worst performers, at 159 out of 177 countries surveyed. The late Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha is estimated to have salted billions of dollars away in overseas bank accounts, with about $730 million in Swiss accounts having been returned. In Nigeria, basic infrastructure rotted. Today, none of Nigeria's main oil refineries are operable, leaving one of the world's top oil producers completely reliant on fuel imports. In the oil region, vines climb up abandoned on-ramps to superhighways planned, but never completed. Meanwhile, military leaders or weak corrupt administrations racked up tens of billions of dollars in loans, including many by Western countries or their funding bodies in hopes of setting up friendly bulwarks against Communism in Africa. But that dynamic began to shift in the late 1980s, as the Cold War ground to a halt. The easy loan money stopped flowing, and markers were called in. Overseas governments began insisting good governance be linked to aid. While few Africans lived in multiparty democracies in the 1970s, most do today. But in many of those countries that hasn't translated into better daily existences for the people. Corruption still keeps governments from acting accountably, as has happened in Nigeria's southern oil delta, where electricity is fitful, pipe-borne potable water virtually nonexistent. The little government spending there has been has been ineffectual. The few new streetlights here in the heart of the oil city of Port Harcourt are solar powered — an apparent admission by town planners that no electricity will soon reach the lamps. Most people live in teeming slums, including John Isah-Aaron, a 32-year old fisherman who's constructing his new home next to open latrines on a riverbank in the vast wetland region where militant attacks have cut oil output by nearly one-third. "Look, here is where we bathe, and also where we toilet," he says, gesturing at the befouled riverbanks. "We're very poor." The movement toward democracy encouraged by the West since the end of the Cold War hasn't made much improvement in his life, he says. Nigeria's civilian leaders have proved as corrupt as the military junta they replaced. "They're saying democracy is government for the people, by the people. But we're not seeing any dividends," he said recently in his village, which is just outside a compound run by the Italian oil-company Agip. ____ Nigeria's oil industry, like those of many other African countries, is primarily run by Western energy concerns. The companies who operate crude-pumping operations and share the proceeds with Nigeria's federal government include Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, France's Total SA, Eni SpA from Italy, and US-based Chevron Corp. But increasingly, China and India have been moving in, too. Chinese and Indian companies won big in a recent round of bids for exploration licenses, for example, and have become big consumers. Much of Africa's estimated 5.5 percent economic growth last year was attributed to China's near-insatiable demand for the continent's oil, gas, timber, copper and other natural resources. Economic growth for sub-Saharan Africa is expected to reach near 7 percent in 2007, according to the IMF. Two-way trade soared 40 percent to $55.5 billion last year, and Beijing says it believes that figure will rise to $100 billion by 2020. At the same time, the United States is also ramping up its influence in Africa. After the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, diminishing reliance on oil from the Middle East has become a stated goal of the U.S. government. Washington recently announced it intended locate a permanent military command for Africa on the continent. "There clearly is an energy component in this," said Navy Rear Admiral Bob Moeller, who's helping arrange the new command. "Overall, Africa is growing in global strategic importance and setting up this command allows us to help them help themselves in enhancing security in their countries, and across the continent writ large," he told the AP in a recent telephone interview. Analysts say the post-Sept. 11 focus on terrorism, combined with high oil prices around the globe, gives Africa a new shot at ending decades of disease, wars, corruption and, above all, the poverty that drives it all. Africa can use its oil-fueled influence to play more powerful nations off each other. It can lobby for more-favorable trade deals, increased direct assistance and better loan rates. Africa is also lobbying for a permanent seat on an expanded U.N. Security Council. The West may not always see Africa's power as productive — Sudan has been able to stave off pressure over the war in Darfur because of support from China, an oil customer. Already, Africa is paying down or having its debt written off from Western lenders, with many countries turning to China instead for funding that critics say comes without any demands for governmental transparency. While graft, poorer educated populaces and inter-community strife still typify many African nations like Nigeria, those countries are looking better each day for the West compared with other oil-rich nations, like Iran and Venezuela. Africa can no longer be ignored, analysts say. "Before, on a day-to-day basis, places like Nigeria seemed like a bad bet," said Goldman, the London-based analyst. "Now people would prefer the day-to-day problems of Nigeria compared with those of the Middle East." Peter Pham, a professor of international relations at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va., said, "Africa can no longer be safely ignored , that era of benign or not-so-benign neglect is over." Oil will get the attention of policy makers, but Africa's security has become a national security issue for the U.S., said Pham. "If 9/11 taught us anything, it's that weak nations can cause threats," he said. "There's an interest in building up the capacity of African states to handle their own problems, provide services for its people." It all adds up to a rare moment of potential influence for Africa, he says, but only if African leaders can at last end their own self-enrichment at the expense of their people. "It's a question of whether African leaders rise to the occasion," said Pham, "or if it just becomes another moment to support themselves." __ Associated Press researcher Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this report. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070630/ap_on_bi_ge/africa_ascending;_ylt=AvFhNXsYxcrEWkVxzXclqg7MWM0F |
No I havent read Uwem's short stories, (I am not big on short story fiction), but they have been anthologized in the New Yorker Magazine, considered to be one of the prestigious literary magazines in the USA. Why you no enter the contest? There are some fine writers on this board who probably stand a chance of being either longlisted or shortlisted for the prize. |
Somebody, your post reeks of pride. There is nothing wrong in doing odd jobs for survival purpose. Be it cleaner, washing dishes, doing security, etc, there is dignity in labor. People have to do this job, so if you feel that those jobs are beneath you, just be thankful that you are in a position to pick and choose. Others dont have the choice. And yeah, abroad, there are some people who work 2 or maybe 3 jobs, and at the same time, there are some who can live off their paycheck, acquired at one job, comfortably. |
Interesting. |
1700 Naira? Hmmm, how much bags of cement would be enough to build a 4 bedroom house? |
For those who pick a ride over shelter, I should ask, "Where will you spend the night after a long day"? |
Stimulus, thanks for a better explanation. May God continue to lead you in His Righteousness path in Jesus Name, Amen. |
Of course it is not true, these cosmetics laboratories have visible outposts/labs where they manufacture their products. So, these claims are baseless. When I lived in Nigeria, there was a strong rumor that a particular brand of sardine, (was it Queen of the coast?) was associated with the river goddess. Such rumors are unfounded. Even in some Churches, I know that women are barred from wearing makeup. Funny thing is that in America, even the Baptist students that I worked with wore makeup to work. |
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