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Cyprian Ekwensi, pharmacist, writer and cultural activist, had his
first short stories broadcast by the British Broadcasting Corporation
during the colonial era. The Second World War was in its third year,
and owning radio sets was more difficult than procuring essential
commodities in that unsettled moment of history. But there were
still some radio sets then in the metropolitan areas of Nigeria
and elsewhere broadcasting to a racially mixed audience in Nigeria,
and the rest of the English speaking world, through which the British
Broacsting Corporation offered Ekwensi’s short story, “The
Half –Baked Doctor” in 1941. It was probably this earlier
exposure to the delights of the magic talking box that would endear
the young Ekwensi to the world of Broadcasting and later other modes
of mass communication. Towards the end of the 1940s decade, Cyprian
Ekwensi was encouraged to present his short stories on a weekly
radio short stories series, a phenomenon that eventually led to
his being invited by a publisher to gather his stories together
for publication. and a development that eventually gave birth to
Cyprian Ekwensi’s When Love Whispers collection
of stories resulted from this weekly programme.
Of all his African contemporaries, Cyprian Ekwensi is probably the
one writer whose multi-trajectory career, spanning more than half
a century, has attracted the most contradictory critical reception.
Quite early in that career, the South African novelist, Peter Abrahams,
in an October 16, 1954 issue of West Africa, described
Ekwensi as “A literary pioneer”. Peter Abrahams had
published his own collection of short stories, Dark Testament
(1942), before Ekwensi. Abrahams also had a 1945 novel, Song
of the City. Even his novel, Mine Boy
(1946) was already out before Ekwensi’s first book came out
in 1947, and long before People of the City, Ekwensi's
first major novel, so it is remarkable that Peter Abrahams should
find it fitting to honour Ekwensi as a "literary pioneer."
.
Though the writer and critic, Kole Omotoso, in a dialogue with Bernth
Lindfors, would seek to distance his own efforts at writing entertainments
for the general reader from the work of Ekwensi, avowing a closer
affinity to the work of Wole Soyinka, generations of African readers
and writers have been inspired and entertained by Ekwensi's work.
His 1948 juvenile novel, When Love Whispers is
said to have formally inaugurated the phenomenon known as Onitsha
Market Literature, influencing subsequent writers in that genre
like Ogali A. Ogali, who was, however, ambivalent in his recall
of Ekwensi's influence on the Ogali classic, Veronica My
Daughter.
Jagua Nana made Ekwensi famous
and it has been one of the most read African novels. No extensive
discussion of the image of the urban woman in African Literature
will be complete without a reference to Ekwensi’s Jagua Nana
or any of his other 'people of the city' novels. In The Sociology
of Urban Women’s Image in African Literature, Kenneth
Little offers his verdict: “it goes without saying that in
the literature, Jagua in Ekwensi’s Jagua Nana,
is the courtesan par excellence.” The boldness with which
Ekwensi handled his subject of the city-demonized urban woman, and
the furore resulting from the botched filming of Jagua Nana may
have accounted for the proliferation of this taboo subject in the
later African novels of INC Aniebo (Madame Obbo in The Journey
Within), Ngugi wa Thiong’o (Wanja in Petals
of Blood) and Meja Mwangi (Wini in Going Down River
Road).
In response to a Bernth Lindfors’ question “when did
you become aware that Africans were writing?” (part of the
Lindfors series, Africa Talks), Taban Lo Liyong responds:
“even when I was younger, I think I had read Cyprian Ekwensi’s
The Passport of Mallam llia.” Lo Liyong was
probably twenty two years when Ekwensi’s children’s
fiction was published. The ‘pan-African’ and seemingly
trans-African setting of Ekwensi’s adventure story which even
includes East and Central African segments may also have impressed
itself on Taban Lo Liyong.
Ekwensi’s contributions to the growth of
children’s Literature in Africa is one that can be better
appreciated as an aspect of his perception of the literary artist
as raconteur. His first published book, Ikolo the Wrestler
and other Ibo Tales (1947) is a collection of folktales
for children. Further publication of his folklores in the 1950s
(in the West African Review and West African Annual)
prepared him for the rich harvest of the 1960s during which he issued
An African Night’s Entertainment (1962), The
Great Elephant Bird (1965) and The Boa Suitor (1966).
It was also concerning one of his works from this period, An
African Night’s Entertainment, that he was accused
of plagiarism. In a defence offered in interview with the folklorist
Ernest Emenyonu, Ekwensi sounded very much like a very knowledgeable
scholar of oral performances: "It is a folk tale. It is a story
which if you live long enough in Northern Nigeria as I did you are
bound to hear one day. Everybody who grows up hears it… like
the Igbo stories of the tortoise…"
Although he comes close to accusing Ekwensi of
plagiarism, Neil Skinner grudgingly accommodates the novelist's
January 1950 defence. Skinner recognizes that there was in circulation
a 1934 book, Jiki Magayi, authored by Rupert East and Mallam J.
Tafida Zaria, which “On Ekwensi’s own admission is simply
a record of a tale once told him by an Hausa man. However, Neil
Skinner does not leave anyone in doubt about his admiration for
Ekwensi’s own contribution to that tale, which resulted in
the successful retelling of An African Night’s Entertainment.
As with his books, which promoted the Igbo and
Hausa folklores of his experience, Cyprian Ekwensi considered himself
as perhaps the most Pan Nigerian of the country’s writers.
He would say: “I love Nigeria and I know it backwards having
been born in the North raised in the West, and of Eastern origin,
and every year I go round Nigeria two or three times by car, by
road, so I know my country and I love it.” Ernest Emenyonu,
one of the scholars to have unearthed much information on Ekwensi,
remarks that the writer’s 1947 broadcasts on radio became
so popular that he came to be nationally known every Saturday night
as ‘’your favorite storyteller” The success of
this radio programme awakened outside interest in Nigerian creative
writing and helped to lay the foundation for Ekwensi’s own
literary career. It led to the establishment of the Scribblers Club,
with a membership including Cyprian Ekwensi, T. M. Aluko (author
of One Man One Matchet) and two promising women writers, Mabel Dove-Danquah
and Phebean Itayemi among others. Their first literary output, a
collection of fourteen short stories, was published in England,
1947, by Lutterworth Press under the title of African New
Writing: Scribblers’ Club.
At about the time Ulli Beier was initiating the
association of artists of diverse persuasions under the umbrella
body that became known as the Mbari Club in 1961, Cyprian Ekwensi
was also concluding arrangements for the inauguration of an assembly
of Nigerian writers in1962. As Ekwensi informed South African writer,
Lewis Nkosi: “I don’t lead an isolated life. I have
recently formed a Society of Nigerian Authors and had the honour
to be made President.” Regarding the reason for establishing
such an organization, he further said: “I felt that Nigeria,
being an independent country, must have a contact body; sometimes
writers come here and they want to know what the writers are doing
here, they should go to a body like the Society of Nigerian Authors.”
Ekwensi, an older man, also ensured there was contact with the Mbari
Writers and Artists. In affirming the quality of this relationship
with the artists’ assembly then based at Ibadan, Ekwensi reveals
as follows: “Mbari is sponsored by the Congress for African
freedom; I am in touch with them, I know the young writers. I have
recently judged a short story competition in which most of the young
writers participated and I receive, like every writer whose name
has appeared before the world, I receive unsolicited manuscripts,
authors coming to me for help. The other day someone wanted me to
pay fare back home!“
This enabling contact Ekwensi had with younger writers, especially
through their manuscripts, would continue in the 1970s, yielding
a great literary harvest. This fraternal relationship with other
much younger literary colleagues was also sustained more than three
decades after. For instance, this writer recalls how Ekwensi mixed
freely with writers who could be his grandchildren during the 1999
convention of the Association of Nigerian Authors. Uche Anyamele,
Florenz Oghuma and Ifeoma Mordi have noted how reporters and photo
journalists flocked to his Lagos residence vying for a photo or
interview opportunity on his 80th birthday. Ekwensi was thus as
popular as the genre in which he chose to engage Literature. This
explains why, according to Anyamele et al, “Pius Adesanmi
… proposed that the younger generation pay a well earned tribute
to Ekwensi through a generational statement in the form of a critical
book on his life and work.”
During the war years in the defunct Eastern Nigerian breakaway Republic
of Biafra, Cyprian Ekwensi found time to rally fellow writers to
the cause of writing. Chidi Amuta locates Ekwensi as one of the
five “established” Nigerian writers, “drawn into
one form of active involvement or the other” mostly in the
civil leadership of Biafra. .Amuta believes that these involvements
and the overall experience of war were to yield much literary harvest.
In his biography of Chinua achebe, Ezenwa Ohaeto reports that between
October and November, 1969, Ekwensi, Chinua Achebe and Gabriel Okara,
were on a “speaking tour” of the United State of America
as guests of ‘Committee for Biafran Writers and Artists,’
a US initiative intended to showcase literary talent in Biafra.
Ezenwa Ohaeto records that the “tour was a 30-campus, two-week
journey in North America during which the three writers lectured
at various Universities and talked to many people officially and
unofficially.” That Ekwensi is a very crucial part of the
Africa literary heritage, especially in Nigeria, can be gleaned
from Chinua Achebe’s “presidential Address 1985”
given to the national writers’ body, Association of Nigerian
Authors. In the address, Achebe notes as follows: “If we are
to succeed in our plan to make next year’s convention an occasion
for celebrating two hundred years of Nigerian Literature (if you
like from Equiano to Ekwensi) then we must set things in motion
now lest our grand theme should become what a British Prime Minister
once described as a grandiloquent label on an empty luggage.”
Of course Chinua Achebe should know. With a close
interaction that goes back to the beginning of the early 1960s,
Achebe, who was also in Ekwensi’s Society of Nigerian Authors,
would recognize the significance of a pioneer Nigerian entertainer
whose short stories were broadcast on the British Broadcasting Corporation
while Achebe was yet a pupil and whose first books preceded Achebe’s
first by ten years. Apart from the privileged interactions he had
with Ekwensi during the 1960s, Achebe who published Ekwensi short
story “Minus Everything” in the first issue of Okike
in April 1971 also had first hand acquaintance in his own travels
with aspects of the early international recognition his colleague
had everywhere he went. Concerning one of such instances during
an interactive session at a forum co-ordinated by the University
of Washington in the Spring of 1973, Achebe, according to Ezenwa
Ohaeto, “learned that his novels and the novels of Cyprian
Ekwensi were popular at one of the Seattle Public Libraries.”
One other way to gauge the character of Cyprian Ekwensi’s
service to Nigerian Literature is by examining his legacy in the
promotion of the short story genre. In 1947, he put together a collection
of Igbo folk tales in the book entitled Ikolo the Wrestler
and Other Ibo tales. Ekwensi was also a major contributor
to what has turned out to be one of the earliest anthologies of
modern short fiction in African literature. This anthology called
African New Writing and edited by T. Cullen Young
features five of Ekwensi’s short stories in a work with fourteen
short stories. Subsequently, there were stories in the literary
journals and magazines of the 1950s. Ekwensi’s short stories
were also honoured in two other highly regarded anthologies - the
Peggy Rutherford edited Darkness and Light: An Anthology
of African Writing (London, 1958), and the Langston Hughes
edited An African Treasury (New York, 1960). Cyprian
Ekwensi was among the earliest Nigerian authors to collect their
short stories into a book. Among these are Chinua Achebe whose The
Sacrificial Egg and Other Short Stories came out in 1962
and E. E. C. Uzodinma, the novelist and author of The Dead
Speak (1967) whose first collection was published in 1966
as Brink of Dawn: Stories of Nigeria. Cyprian Ekwensi
two early coolections are The Rainmaker and Other Stories
(1965) and Lokotown and Other Stories (1966). Francis
Ademola was the pioneering Nigerian to anthologize short fiction
in the post –independence period. His work, Reflections:
Nigerian Prose and Verse, came out in 1962. Nigerian
Prose and Verse came out in 1962.
Cyprian Ekwensi also assisted in promoting short
stories by his younger colleagues. For instance, In an August, 1962
interview he told Lewis Nkosi: “I have recently judged a short
story competition in which most of the young writers participated”
I should like to offer aspects of “Africa and the Short Story
Tradition” which contribution I made during a listserve debate
in krazitivity between 2006 and January 2007 on the supposed
non patronage of the short story form by established African writers.
Concerning Cyprian Ekwensi’s significance in this regard as
an institutional facilitator, I did submit as follows: “Cyprian
Ekwensi enjoyed in the preceding two decades and a half that must
have necessitated his resolve in the early 1970s to collaborate
with a German outfit to present some Nigerian short stories in German.
Thus, Ekwensi became a literary godfather to some Nigerian short
story writers with the publication of Moderne Erzahler der
Welt: Nigeria (1973) co-edited with Albert Von Haller.
Among the Nigerian writers whose works are anthologized here are
Ekwensi, Achebe, Aniebo, Tutuola, Bakare, Gbadamosi, Femi Euba,
David Owoyele, Frank Aig Imoukhuede, M. J. C Echeruo and Gabriel
Okara. Others are Yetunde Esan, Chukwuemeka Ike and Flora Nwapa.
Ulli Beier also appears in this collection under the pen name, Obotunde
Ijimere. Gabriel Okara’s short story included in this collection
is entitled “The Laughing Ghost” while M. J.
C. Echeruo’s is “Uchegwu’s Song.”
In the same spirit of functioning as a dependable promoter of Nigerian
short stories, Ekwensi edited the special Festac Anthology
of Nigerian New Writing (1977). Ekwensi’s second
anthology that showcases Nigerian short stories among other contributions
is unique. Beyond presenting the works of such known writers as
Onuora Nzekwu, Amos Tutuola and Rasheed Gbadamosi. “
Ekwensi’s anthology also introduced newer
writers such as Fola Arilesero, Tayo Balogun, Sunday Nwakammu and
Nnadozie Inyama. Furthermore, we are also introduced to another
dimension of Ola Rotimi’s heritage as a creative writer, Ola
Rotimi, the short story writer whose contribution has a title rendered
in partial pidgin English, Di Man and Di Black Mosquito. Ekwensi’s
second anthology boasts of projecting such other relatively newer
Nigerian authors as Charles Okigbo, Terwase Avakaa, Jide Osikomaya,
Tunji Fatilewa, C. Onwu-Otuyelu (Charry Ada Onwu), C. Wilson Amuta
(Chidi Amuta), Harry Garuba and so on. It was also Ekwensi’s
Festac anthology that gave further projection to Odia Ofeimun’s
then growing reputation as an up coming new poet. By publishing
six of Ofeimun’s poems, including his famous tribute poems
to Christopher Okigbo, Miriam Makeba and Chinua Achebe, Ekwensi,
like Wole Soyinka two years earlier, became another major established
writer anthologist editor to contribute to the early canonization
of Odia Ofeimun. It was within the same exciting 1970s when a number
of Nigerian writers such as Obi Egbuna (1970), Flora Nwapa (1971),
Chinua Achebe (1972 and 1973), and Kole Omotoso (1973 and 1978),
published selections of their short stories that Ekwensi also brought
out two of his books of short stories. These are Restless
City and Christmas Gold (1975) and The Rainbow-
Tinted Scarf and other stories (1979) Thus, by the end
of the 1970s, Ekwensi became the first Nigerian writer to have published
four collections of his short stories.
Cyprian Ekwensi’s profile as a cultural icon cannot be complete
without a reference to his activities as book reviewer, essayist
and literary critic. In addition to the book reviews published in
the period between 1952 and 1960 in such journals as African
Affairs, West Africans Review and West Africa among
others, Cyprian Ekwensi also deliberated on different aspects of
African Literature in such essays as “Outlook for African
Writers” (1950), “The Dilemma of the African
Writer” (1956), “Problems of Nigerian Writers”
(1963) and “African Literature” (1964). In “Problems
of Nigerian Writers,” where as was the tradition in the early
1960s when it was published, Ekwensi shows that he was apprised
of current issues in the discourse of African writing when he attempts
a definition of African writing as that “writing which reveals
the psychology of the African.”
Cyprian Ekwensi’s time in the management of the Daily
Star was a period of intellectual and journalistic excitement
at the newspaper. Under his tenure, his paper could boast of such
writers as Uche Offia Nwali, Xdryz Eyutchay, C. de Aguomba, John
Anamaleze Jr, “Gonze” Godwin Nzegwu, “Sledgehammer”
Thomas Chigbo and Linus Okechi, alias “Xray.” Ekwensi
wrote a column in the paper humorously called ‘Cash on Delivery’,
intended as a pun on his initials C. O. D. As indicated by Sam Anibeze,
author of Daily Star: The First Ten Years, Ekwensi
was appointed the first Managing Director of the Star Printing and
Publishing Company, publishers of Daily Star, which he
introduced to replace the ailing state owned Renaissance newspaper
in the East of Nigeria.. The Daily Star became a commercial
success within the first six months of Ekwensi’s assumption
of office. Sam Anibeze notes as follows: “the initial circulation
figure of the newspaper in 1975 was put at 60, 000. By the end of
that year the figure was said to have risen to 80,000. By January
1976, the circulation was reported to have hit 90, 000 and 120,
000 in April of the same year” Linus Okechi joined the Daily
Star from the old Renaissance newspaper. He fondly remembers
Ekwensi as a Managing Director who diversified the business, establishing
several other publications, including Ogene, Evening Star, Academic
Star, and the SPPC News Letter. To give meaning to
his dream, he. bought the biggest printing press of the time - the
giant Harris 845 designed to produce 120,000 copies of a 32-page
newspaper within an hour.
Allied to Ekwensi’s dream as the publisher of a successful
state government owned newspaper was his desire to create a book
publishing and marketing regime that would break the tyranny of
“the legacy of publishing left to us by the colonial administration”.
Arguing in a journal that “publishers for Africa must find
their own style”, Ekwensi remarked that before Chinweizu’s
idea of “the decolonization of African Literature…there
should be a decolonization of African publishing.” Impressed
by the remarkable sales achieved by the war memoirs of former President
Olusegun Obasanjo, My Command, and Alexander Madiebo,
The Biafran Revolution, Ekwensi suggested an alternative
and radical approach to book distribution. He argued that “
Publishers for Africa must find their own style just as publishers
for America have done. Our culture recognizes retailing by hawking.
If that will be the final answer to making our people read more
books, then books must be hawked. James Hadley Chase is available
in every corner of every post office in this country. Recently the
Kingsway stores in Lagos displayed forty-five of his titles throughout
all its chain stores in the country. No book by any African writer
has ever received that marketing treatment? Why?” In advocating
his concept of “Mass Publishing,” Ekwensi argued for
a speeding up of the book production process since “we live
in a jet age and must therefore adapt.” Publishers should
be encouraged “to woo … writers and enable them make
writing a career without having to supplement their royalties with
road-building contracts from the ministry of works.”
As with Nnamdi Azikiwe who apart from being a film
addict was also a critic of the cinema, Cyprian Ekwensi’s
involvement with the film world is one major enterprise that contests
the unfounded and dismissive statements about the supposed anti-cinema
culture of the Igbo. It is strange that despite Emmanuel Obiechina’s
profound research into the relationship between the cinema and the
fictional landscape of the Onitsha market pamphleteers, the fact
that Sanders of the River was partly shot in Eastern Nigeria
and that the 1949 film, Daybreak in Udi, made cinema history
for even featuring dialogue in Igbo language and was shown round
the old Eastern region, several uninformed commentators tend to
reject the idea of the Igbo man being knowledgeable about film scripting,
production and viewership before the emergence of the video film
business. With Ekwensi we have a very good example of an Igbo man
who was very much involved with the world of cinema from the earliest
beginnings to the period preceding the advent of home video. For
instance, in a British Broadcasting item captioned “West African
writers 11” under the forum ‘calling West Africa’
on November 18, 1947, Leslie Murby recounting as follows about Ekwensi’s
cinema heritage and especially the influence on his writing notes
that his stories “betray his influences; the cinema with its
Humphrey Bogart types and its flick change scenes, reading as a
boy of the wild west type” (qtd in Dathorne 81).
Ekwensi’s interest in the movies would, as
he revealed in interviews with Dennis Duerden and Bernth Lindfors,
1964 and 1974, respectively, accounts for some of his later involvement
with film scripting. Indeed his writing of film scripts, which he
talks about in an interview with Lindfors, was already an acknowledged
fact by 1956, when it was reported in the June 1956 issue of
West African Review. In his book, Cyprian Ekwensi,
Ernest Emenyonu, apart from reflecting on Ekwensi’s career
as one who “wrote and broadcast plays and stories for the
B. B. C. overseas service,” also examines Ekwensi’s
life as a cinema person. He addresses the different departments
of the cinema world in which Ekwensi involved himself. Once in 1954
his voice was ‘dubbed’ on to the sound track of the
film Man of Africa, which was shown at the Venice film
festival that year. He took part in plays on the stage and radio
and wrote film scripts. One of his film scripts was ‘Stretch
a Little, Bend a Little.’ It was the story of a man with
two wives, one very tall and the other very short, and the husband
had to adjust himself to please both without losing his dignity.
In 1956 when the film Nigeria Greets the Queen was produced (on
the occasion of Queen Elizabeth 11’s visit to Nigeria), Ekwensi
was one of the commentators. A year later he appeared as a film
star in Ghana, when he performed the part of a university professor
in a film marking Ghanaian independence
It is Ekwensi the film connoisseur that we encounter
in interviews with Lewis Nkosi and later Dennis Duerden. When asked
by Lewis Nkosi about the arrangement for the filming of Jagua
Nana, Ekwensi answers as follows. “ The work is to
be filmed in the dry season, that is end of October, beginning of
November, or roundabout the middle of November. And the company
is called Delphia. It’s a new company, but all the members
are old and famous filmmakers. The producer is going to be Alberto
Latunda who’s well known internationally. And ltaly, as you
know is an up-and-coming centre for filmmaking, almost stealing
the Oscar from Hollywood.” In this highly revealing presentation,
Ekwensi shows how very knowledgeable he was by 1962 of developments
in the world of cinema. Ekwensi’s talk about an important
and internationally well known Italian film producer is highly significant
especially within the context of demonstrating the rating of Italian
cinema at the end of the 1950s). As with Wole Soyinka who in a 1963
essay also talks knowledgeably about Japanese cinema, Cyprian Ekwensi
also showed a high level of acquaintance in an interview with Dennis
Duerden’s, comparing what he tries to do in his novel, Jagua
Nana to details from the Japanese feature film, Rashomon.
His is the disposition of a man who has been to the movie world
and invariably sought to domesticate perspectives drawn from such
a world in some of his novels.
Having come this far, it should be natural to conclude this tribute
by highlighting the character of the critical reception Cyprian
Ekwensi has enjoyed and especially with his Jagua Nana
which has been described as his most successful work. Concerning
Ekwensi’s accomplishment in Jagua Nana ,Juliet Okonkwo, who
has done no less than five essays on Ekwensi, notes that “Ekwensi
delves into the complex nature of his heroine, so that the reader
is finally made to contemplate her in her own right, as an individual.
Jagua is presented in greater depth than Sango, as she is seen in
her varying roles of prostitute, woman, lover, and mother”
(“Popular Novelist” 24-25). Okonkwo believes that “Ekwensi’s
greater success in Jagua Nana lies also in his control of language;
particularly impressive is his ability to handle various levels
of English expression, allotting the appropriate level to each character.”
The sociologist, Kenneth Little, seems to pay homage
to Ekwensi by devoting a sizeable portion of his book, The
Sociology of Urban Women’s Image in African Literature
to five of his novels and his second short story collection. Considering
that Ekwensi’s novels constitute about the greatest number
of city-centred novels done by an African, Little’s presentation
demonstrates to what extent Ekwensi’s portraits are socially
realistic. For instance, outside Sembene Ousmane’s politically
sensitive novel, God’s Bits of Wood, Kenneth
Little believes that “Jagua’s apparently successful
oratory” is a good demonstration of the supposed rarity in
African fiction where a woman is given a significant position as
a politician or effective associate of a politician
Although Chinweizu et al, the authors of Toward the Decolonization
of African Literature, declare that “we are not evaluating
Jagua Nana, but instead are analyzing and evaluating
Palmer’s criticism of it”, they invariably end as the
greatest defenders of Ekwensi’s novel, especially in relation
to the charge of weakness in moral vision. As Chinweizu et al argue,
“for Palmer, Jagua is an Immoral Woman; she especially irks
him by showing no remorse for her ways. Ekwensi doesn’t criticize,
ridicule or make excuses for her, but instead appears quite captivated
with her. From Palmer’s standpoint, a book in which an author
appears to be captivated with an immoral character cannot be a good
book.” Chinweizu et al wonder if an author’s moral altitude
is indeed central for the critic, what is Shakespeare’s attitude
towards Cleopatra, or Richard 111, or Iago, or Macbeth? What is
Achebe’s attitude towards Okonkwo, Obi Okonkwo, Ezeulu, or
Chief Nanga? How does one know? Would Palmer claim to know? In particular,
how does Palmer determine Ekwensi’s attitude towards Jagua?
Still applying the Shakespeare analogy they proffer the following
queries: What would Palmer’s attitude be towards Cleopatra
who, though a queen, might accurately be described, like Jagua,
as a whore and “a nymphomaniac with a crazy passion for sex”?
Or towards Richard 111, that ugly hunchback and sweet-tongued murderer
whose person was an aesthetic offence to regal splendour, and whose
villainous deeds were a moral danger to “civilized standards”?
Or to lago, that infamous troublemaker and bearer of false witness
whose calculated villainy led to the slaughter of innocents? Or
to Macbeth, that ambitious regicide, usurper and provoker of civil
strife?
Critic Juliet Okonkwo, in an essay entitled “Ekwensi and
The ‘Something New and Unstable’ In Modern Nigerian
Culture,” believes that “It is impossible to ignore
him in any assessment of Nigerian Literary effort”. According
to Okonkwo, “if Ekwensi’s novels fail to achieve aesthetic
beauty – and this is not absolute; his writing is very vigorous
and his descriptions vivid and evocative – they nevertheless
succeed in analyzing seriously the moral and social problems which
confront the Nigerian nation and in its period of transition”.
Even when she believes that “Ekwensi may not be as accomplished
an artist as Achebe and Soyinka,” Juliet Okonkwo, nonetheless
recognizes that “no other Nigerian writer till date has succeeded
as much as Ekwensi in reflecting the contemporary scene with all
its implications and contradictions.” In deliberating on Ekwensi’s
essential distinction and by implication, his inimitable style,
Okonkwo reveals that, unlike Soyinka and Achebe, Ekwensi traverses
the country to reveal its multi-tribal nature, and demonstrates
how these different peoples affect each other. Ekwensi has faced
up to the problems of modern Nigeria-social, political and moral
– with fidelity and with candour. It is very significant that
Iska, which devotes a large section to the intricacies and agonies
of tribal animosity in Nigeria appeared just before the conflicts
that led to the civil war. Against the above background, it becomes
easier to see that one reason Cyprian Ekwensi ventured into so many
areas of modern arts and mass communications was to impact his society.
Ekwensi, as Ernest Emenyonu points out, “in 1962 … published
Burning Grass, the first major novel by a Nigerian to address
the life of the cattle Fulani. It is significant that twenty-five
years later the country was to get involved in nomadic education.”
In a memorial entitled “Hubert Ogunde: Death Shall Have
no Dominion” and published seventeen years ago, Afam
Akeh concludes as follows:
the doyen of Nigerian theatre has made the most
dramatic of all his exits from the stage. The lights are out and
the curtain is drawn, but he lives still as a metaphor of excellence
and as the spirit of an epoch in the history of the black peoples.
And death shall have no dominion over our memory of him."
Although one can say the same generally about
virtually every major writer, the idea of death having “no
dominion over our memory” of Cyprian Ekwensi is a very fitting
metaphor in honour of a man whose imagination was so supremely productive
in the period between 1941 and 2007. One cannot but agree with Ekwensi
himself that
“the satisfaction I have gained from writing
can never be quantified. Writing has opened doors for me, which
would be otherwise closed. Writing has given me honours which
no head of state can match because these honours come from the
hearts of my millions of readers most of whom I have never met.”
Truly, nothing can be more consoling for a writer.
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