Drums for Flora Nwapa’s Efuru at 50
September 4, 2016 LITERARY CAFÉ
Yinka
Olatunbosun
Look
around you. Today, the world celebrates Chimamanda Adichie, Beyonce Knowles and
Michelle Obama as contemporary feminists. However, for many students of
literature, you cannot separate feminism from the works of many African women
writers. Name them, Buchi Emecheta, Efua Sutherland and Mariama Ba, all have
written around women and their stake in the patriarchal African setting. But
the first woman to ever write a published work of literature in Africa is Flora
Nwapa and is deservedly referred to as the First Lady of letters. Her most
celebrated work which is incidentally her debut novel, Efuru was published in
1966 by Heinemann, London in the African Writers Series. It was all the impetus
other African women writers needed to turn their imagination into readable
narratives.
Nwapa
was the first to expose the nature of the African woman to the world; her
ordeals in marriage and societal expectations. The plot tells of an Igbo woman,
Efuru who lives in a small village in colonial West Africa. She desires to bear
a child and has the ill fortune of being married twice to two men with
polygamous mindset. Although the book is 50 this year, the thematic content of
independent woman, marital infidelity and belief in the supernatural powers in
Efuru makes it very relevant in our time. Spinning the time backwards, Efuru
was in the reading list in secondary schools as well as tertiary institutions
where literature is taught. But lately, Efuru has become extinct. But to
celebrate the iconic work, the only son of the respected writer, Uzoma Nwakuche
who is the Chairman, Flora Nwapa Foundation has recently announced that a
coordinated series of activities are lined up to mark the golden anniversary of
this inspiring work.
At
the Literamed Publications Building, Ikeja, a press conference was held to
inform the public that Efuru , the pioneering novel would be celebrated in four
cities namely, Lagos, Abuja, Maiduguri, Enugu as well as the writer’s hometown,
Oguta. The buzz has been on social media but the effect is incomparable to the
nolstagic feeling at the sight of an old copy of the book placed on the table
to evoke fond memories.
The
coordinator and promoter, Efuru at 50, Prince Paschal N. Mebuge-Obaa II,
explained the choice of the locations for the celebrations.
“The
relevance of Enugu in this celebration cannot be over-emphasised. This is to
appreciate the fact that Flora Nwapa taught English and Geography at Queens
School, Enugu in 1960s and nurtured her God-given talents as a novelist and
publisher in Enugu before moving to Lagos. She was thrice appointed
Commissioner in quick succession at Enugu, the capital of East Central, where
she worked and eventually died in 1993,” he said.
Nwapa
was also an assistant registrar at the University of Lagos between 1962 and
1964 and a visiting Professor at the University of Maiduguri. The Chairman,
National Organising Committee, Dr. Wale Okediran gave an insight into the
activities surrounding the celebrations which include discourse and paper
presentations, symposia, children’s carnival, writing competitions, drama
sketches from Efuru as well as the Grand Finale which will be held in Enugu and
Oguta.
“A
major aspect of the National Event is the literary competition among secondary
school students in the four centres. Copies of Efuru will be given to these
students to read for one month before the day of the Literary Competition. The
competition will involve a quiz, reading comprehension and one-act dramatic
enactment of any part of the book by participating schools,” he said, adding that
the submission of abstracts will commence in September and the deadline for the
submission of the academic papers is October.
The
theme for the national conference is which will take place in the five cities
is “Efuru @50: A Celebration of Flora Nwapa and African Women Literature’’.
“The
conference will also be celebrating the pioneering work of Africa’s first
published female author as well as the achievements, friendships, partnerships
and challenges of African Women Literature this past 50 years. The conference
will be a platform for writers, scholars, literary critics and other interested
parties to engage, rethink and propose possible new directions for African
women literature. It will also answer questions about women’s contribution to
the African literature, the Diaspora’s influence on African literature and the
extent to which the same has been influenced by the current global trends,’’ he
said. For Nwapa’s son, Uzoma remembering his mother through her literary
masterpiece is the least one can do in honour of the woman of firsts. Nwapa was
omitted from the list of the honoured Nigerians during the centenary
celebrations. Her son pledged to keep her memory alive in spite of the national
omission.
“I
was breast-fed for two years by my mother even while she was in public service.
Though she was a public figure, she was a mother. I knew her more as a mother
than as a writer. She inculcated a great sense of tolerance and balance and I
admire her way of dealing with people and things,” he said.
The
Flora Nwapa Foundation will focus on women, promoting women literature,
financial independence and entrepreneurial skills. In future, a Flora Nwapa
centre would be established to serve as a hub for women writers.
https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/09/04/drums-for-flora-nwapas-efuru-at-50/
No comments:
Post a Comment