12

Jun

2007

Chinua Achebe wins Man Booker Prize PDF Print E-mail
By Guardian UK

Man Booker International judges honour Chinua Achebe

John Ezard
Wednesday June 13, 2007
Guardian Unlimited


The £60,000 Man Booker International prize goes today to the Nigerian author Chinua Achebe in a decision which confers equal lustre on giver and receiver.

In choosing to give the award to a man who is regularly described as the father of modern African literature, the judges have signalled that this new global Booker has achieved the status of an authentic world award in only its second contest.

By honouring Achebe they have redressed what is seen in Africa - and beyond - as the acute injustice that he has never received the Nobel prize, allegedly because he has spent his life struggling to break the grip of western stereotypes of Africa. One of his most famous essays is an onslaught against Joseph Conrad's masterpiece Heart of Darkness, a novel about a European's descent into savagery in Africa.

The choice of a 76-year-old also establishes the MBI as a lifetime achievement award. The shortlisted author thought to have come nearest to beating Achebe is the great Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes, who is 78.
Among mostly younger writers on a towering shortlist were Britain's Doris Lessing, Ian McEwan and Salman Rushdie, Ireland's John Banville, the Americans Philip Roth and Don DeLillo, the Canadians Margaret Atwood, Alice Munro and Michael Ondaatje, and the dissident Israeli Amos Oz.

Achebe, the son of a mission school teacher, grew up to become the most widely translated writer Africa has produced thanks to the novel considered to be his masterpiece, Things Fall Apart (1958). The story is set in the Igbo community of Umuofia, in the years preceding colonial government. When the Christian English missionaries arrive, Achebe's protagonist, Okonkwo, fails to convince his fellow villagers that their own society will fall apart if they exchange their cultural core for that of the English.

The decision crowns an astonishing few days for the Igbo people of southern Nigeria whose doomed bid to secede touched off the Biafra war in the late 1960s. Last week a young fellow-Igbo, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a disciple of Achebe, won the Orange fiction prize with her novel about the war, Half of a Yellow Sun.

The first MBI award in 2005 went to the Albanian writer Ismail Kadare. The Booker judges announce the winner of their biennial award today with a chorus of accolades. The chairwoman of the judging committee, the academic and critic Elaine Showalter, said: "In Things Fall Apart and his other fiction set in Nigeria, Chinua Achebe inaugurated the modern African novel. He also illuminated the path for writers around the world seeking new words and forms for new realities and societies."

Showalter was joined on the judging panel by the South African novelist Nadine Gordimer and the author Colm Toíbín. Gordimer said of Achebe that he has achieved "what one of his characters brilliantly defines as the writer's purpose: 'a new-found utterance' for the capture of life's complexity. This fiction is an original synthesis of the psychological novel, the Joycean stream of consciousness, the post-modern breaking of sequence. He is a joy and an illumination to read."

Toíbín, meanwhile, said that Things Fall Apart "manages to capture an essential moment in the colonial drama; it dramatises momentous change with clarity, sympathy and astonishing fluency and ease."

The passion of Achebe's convictions is shown by his refusal for many years to allow his novels to be translated into Igbo, which he still considers a bastardised missionary version of authentic village dialects. However, Things Fall Apart has been translated into 50 other languages and sold 10m copies.

His other most influential work - discussed in classrooms worldwide - is the essay An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness (1975), which accuses Conrad of dehumanising Africans and rendering their continent as "a metaphysical battlefield devoid of all recognisable humanity, into which the wandering European enters at his peril".

Achebe was once asked which authors had told the story of Africa well. Hundreds, he said, "including many we don't normally talk about and regard as literature - the oral tradition", the village storytellers who had been active long before colonisers introduced pen and paper. "Humanity," he said, "will always attempt to create a story."

Achebe will receive the award and a trophy at a ceremony on June 28 in Oxford.



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 13.06.2007 00:42

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FjordFjord is offline

 # 2 | 13.06.2007 01:06

Supert! Fantastisk!

A well-deserved honour for the genius of the Eagle.

.

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Oguguo YakereOguguo Yakere is offline

 # 3 | 13.06.2007 01:46

Ichie,
Congratulations!!!!! You have added another well deserved feather to your "okpu" (hat).
May you remain blessed.

People,
"The chicken has again hatched. It is time to watch out for the hawk".

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Mikky jagaMikky jaga is offline

 # 4 | 13.06.2007 02:29

Why should Achebe accept a foreign award and reject his National award? I ask in a new found spirit of patriotism. He should with immediate effect meet UMY to collect his medal before ILN discovers what is happening.:biggrin::rolleyes::biggrin:

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nallanahnallanah is offline

 # 5 | 13.06.2007 04:35

Congratulations Sir,

Well deserved! ......with each passing day, I become even prouder to be a Nigerian!!

Well Done, again!

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pappilopappilo is offline

 # 6 | 13.06.2007 05:08

Well done sir!

please dont collect that GCON award as advised by Mikky oh! That awrd is for thieves and liars. It will desecrate your shrine where you keep your numerous awards

Regards

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calistcalist is offline

 # 7 | 13.06.2007 05:51

CONGRATULATIONS SIR!!!

You deserve it. Shine on.


=pappilo;183345>Well done sir!

please dont collect that GCON award as advised by Mikky oh! That awrd is for thieves and liars. It will desecrate your shrine where you keep your numerous awards

Regards



@ pappilo,

Thanks for clearly pointing the above out.

Calist

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mayitbedonemayitbedone is offline

 # 8 | 13.06.2007 06:08

A big congratulations to this great scholar. Receiving this award is definitely more honourable than the image-washing award OBJ and his cronies wanted to bestow on you.

Many more feathers to your hat!!!

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el_pharoahel_pharoah is offline

 # 9 | 13.06.2007 06:23

A huge congratulations and looking forward with ernest to when you will be given the Nobel Prize too :-)

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ikechijiikechiji is offline

 # 10 | 13.06.2007 06:29

Congratulations Prof. Achebe! Nigerians are immensely proud of your accomplishments.

Given what is going on in Nigeria with people like the fake "Dr" Uba (who cannot produce his Ph.D. dissertation for anyone to see) insult your pedigree when you criticize what is going in Anambra state in particular and Nigeria at large, we do need OBJ to tell us that you are a true Grand Commander Of Nigeria (GCON).

The thieves might be ruling today but one day the owners will reclaim what is rightfully theirs starting with Andy Uba being chased out of office by the Supreme Court tomorrow.

Odego
 

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