By Arthur E. E. Smith
Cyprian Ekwensi is not only one of
the first African novelists to receive wide exposure in
the West but also the most prolific African novelist.
His People of the City (1954) was the first West
African novel in modern style English to be published
in England. It’s publication thus marked an important
development in African literature.
In the opinion of one of his
critics, Bernth Lindfors, none of Ekwensi’s numerous
works is entirely free from amateurish blots and
blunders. Lindfors therefore concludes that he could not
call any “the handiwork of a careful, skilled
craftsman.”
But Ernest Emenyonu, a Nigerian
critic noted for his sympathy towards Ekwensi, charges
that Ekwensi “has never been correctly assessed as a
writer.” Another sympathetic critic, an American who
has been a long-standing convert to the study of African
Literature, Charles Larson, describes him as one of the
most prolific African writers of the twentieth century.
An Ibo, like Chinua Achebe, Ekwensi
was born in 1921 in Minna, Niger State, in Northern
Nigeria, but attended secondary school in a
predominantly Yoruba area, Ibadan. He is
very familiar with the many major ethnic groups in his
country, and thus possesses a knowledge often well exploited in his
novels. He went on subsequently to Yaba Higher College
in Ibadan and then moved over to Achimota College in
Ghana where he studied forestry. For two years he
worked as a forestry officer and then taught science
for a brief period. He then entered the Lagos School of
Pharmacy. He later continued at the University of
London (Chelsea School of Pharmacy) during which period
he wrote his earliest fiction, his first book-length
publication Ikolo
the
Wrestler
and Other Ibo Tale (1947) , published in London. His writings earned him a place in
the National Media where he rose to Head of features in
the NIGERIAN BROADCASTING SERVICES and ultimately
becoming its Director.
Sex, violence, intrigue, and mystery
in a recognizable contemporary setting most often in the
fast-paced melting pot of the city were common diet in Ekwensi’s works especially in
Jagua Nana, in which a very
worldly and highly attractive forty-five year old
Nigerian woman with multiple suitors falls in love with
a young teacher, Freddie. She agrees to send him to
study law in England on the understanding of getting
married on his return. Around this beautiful and
impressive prostitute, Ekwensi sets in motion a whole
panoply of vibrant, amoral characters who have drifted
from their rural origins to grab the dazzling pleasures
of the city. And the novel itself shows us the seedy
underbelly of the big city, Lagos, where Jagua’s
favourite haunt, the Tropicana bar, sets the scene for
much of the story.
People of the City recounts the coming
to political awareness of a young reporter and band
leader in an emerging African country. The novel is
filled with his running commentary on the problems of
bribery and corruption and despotism bedeviling such
states.
Burning Grass (1962) portrays the life of
the nomadic Fulani cattlemen of Northern Nigeria through
the adventures of Mai Sunsaye and his sons.
Beautiful Feathers (1963) reflects the
nationalist and pan-Africanist consciousness of the
pre-independence days of the 1950s and how the young
hero’s youthful commitment to his ideal leads to the
disintegration of his family, thus underscoring the
proverb alluded to in the title: “however famous a man
is outside, if he is not respected inside his own home
he is like a bird with beautiful feathers, wonderful on
the outside but ordinary within.”
Survive
the Peace (1971), a post-mortem on the
just-concluded Nigeria-Biafra war, interrogates the
problems of surviving in the so-called peace. It looks
for instance at the pathetic fate of James Odugo, a
journalist who survives the war only to be cut down on
the road by marauding former soldiers.
This paper examines the five works
earlier mentioned in terms of their artistry as well as
their compulsiveness and the authenticity of their
presentations of the social and political preoccupations
in West Africa
then.
Starting off from the plot it is
most evident that Ekwensi spins mostly very good and
interesting stories. But the problem is that his plots
are often episodic thus lacking organic unity, In
People of the City the plot is loose and episodic.
The looseness at the end of the various sub-plots makes
the novel read like a chronicle of events in the lives
of people. However, the placing of the same characters
in all these events hold them together. The plot is also
episodic in
Jagua Nana with about three subplots not
firmly linked and justified within the wider contexts of
the novel. One of them is the one that brings Jagua to
Freddie’s homeland. The other three novels, however are
spared this problem as they display better plot
control.
Some incidents in the works do not
come out real and convincing . All too often there are
frequent recourse to melodramatics. These are most
evident in the many dramatic incidents involving Amusa
Sango and Jagua Nana, those of murders, fights and
suicides as well as the numerous sexual orgies involving
the same characters. Fortunately Survive
the Peace seems to have been spared much
of that.
In addition, many characters fail
to come off real and convincing. The women Amusa Sango
meets with in
People of the City are mostly
unvaryingly portrayed as beautiful. Even the main
character himself, Sango, comes off as shallow and
stereotyped.. Much of what we know of him is through
authorial commentary rather than through what is
revealed of him by his words, thoughts, and actions.
Freddie’s portrayal in
Jagua Nana is very shadowy. Many
of his actions seem rather implausible. It seems
improbable for an honest and idealistic young man to be
suddenly transformed to a self-serving and lusty
political aspirant simply because he has just returned
from studying overseas.
Other characters such as Uncle Namme, Uncle Ofubara, and Dennis Odoma are almost as
good as pawns. Uncle Taiwo’s comical presentation makes
him more of a caricature than a fully developed
character. He is there simply as a pawn introducing the
political aspects of Lagos life. Seldom does Ekwensi
allow the reader to follow the thought processes of his
characters. Neither is his use of diction successful in
distinguishing the various characters whose speech
remain unvarying in spite of the varying situations and
circumstances in which they find themselves. Freddie’s
superior education does not enable him to speak
differently from his uneducated prostitute lover, Jagua.
Ekwensi’s characters even when involved in events of
cultural significance, reveal only a superficial
awareness, learning little or nothing about themselves
in their quests.
There is also not much to commend
in Ekwensi’s use of language. For one, his use of
English is mostly uncertain, displaying little mastery
of the rules and current usages. Unlike Achebe, he has
not developed an authentic African voice. His language
seems largely imitative of fourth-rate westerns. For he
seems to be merely pandering to the tastes and
expectations of the book-buying public in the West that
expected certain literary conventions and forms. His
style of writing therefore had to be influenced by
them. For as he himself said he was writing for a mass
appeal so much so that in an interview with Larson he
was anticipating the wealth he would have been swimming
in if he were writing in America.
Despite the above, hundreds of
thousands of readers both in the West and in Nigeria,
have found entertainment and a realistic picture of the
pleasures and hazards of city life in his writings. But
could his works be redeemed by his serious preoccupation
with some of the most pressing social and political
problems threatening modern Nigeria? How well does he
come to terms with the social and political concerns of
Nigeria as well as Africa? But in trying to investigate
this it might be necessary to look at how he grapples
with the “chaotic formlessness and persistent flux of
the modern Nigerian city.”
Ekwensi’s works are set in rural as
well as urban centres. These bipolar environments enable
him to show up the ugliness and monstrosity of the city
beside the idyllic and pristine beauty of rural life. In
the rural countryside values such as honesty, industry,
and respect for the elders, ancestors and God are held
in high regard. But in the cold, foreign, alien and
barren wasteland which is the city, people are
dishonest, politicians are corrupt and neighbors are at
hostilities. It is such a hostile world that the emigres
from the rural area are thrust into as prey. In contrast
to the beauty and innocence of the country, here they
are “daily confronted by wretched filth, decadence,
hopelessness, and prevarication.” Thus despite the
superficial lustre they might see in the city their
hopes of self-fulfillment are always beset with
stifling setbacks, For the city has a formidable
influence, a magnetic force that brandishes from a
distance only its excitement, gaiety, and transient
glitter, luring people to either destruction or
downfall.
In
People of the City Sango
and almost everyone with whom he interacts are shown as
suffering from that oppressiveness. The city moves to
becoming a central motif and then graduates to almost
like a character, controlling, defining, organizing and
often destroying other people’s lives. It is like a trap
helping to devour the unwary as is suggested in the very
first sentence: “How the city attracts all types and
how the unwary must suffer from ignorance of its
ways.” The policeman’s warning after Aina’s arrest:
“. . . person who’s not careful the city will eat
him” further captures the incipient danger.
Added to that is the constant warning voice of his
mother, about the women of the city.
Beatrice is the prime victim.,
though she seems the most vulnerable. She already
demonstrates, on our first acquaintance with her, the
restlessness and the yearning for excitement, activity
and freedom which usually impel those who are destined
to be the city’s victims, but she is also showing signs
of degradation and disintegration - she already suffers
from the deadly disease which is eventually to claim her
life.
So entrapped is Beatrice in its
clutch that at the end she could not respond favorably
to redemption thus earning for herself in the end a
humiliating pauper’s funeral.
The young girl, Aina, when led to
court , standing against a city determined to show her
no mercy,” though initially capable of demonstrating
warm feelings, becomes inevitably conditioned by the
city’s callousness into a hardened thief and
blackmailer.” earning herself finally a hard prison
sentence.
Dazed by the illusory glitter, they
all surrender to the money, fame and influence to be
gained. Lost in such a hysteria of living, they follow
their basest inclinations with total abandon. Sango in
the end, however, cannot bear the scrutiny of others.
Jagua, like all other oppressed
females “who came to Lagos, imprisoned, entangled in the
city, unable to extricate themselves from its clutches”
had come to free herself from the taunts and menacing
attitude of her people in Ogabu who kept chiding her for
not being productive even after three years of marriage.
The Lagos she goes to is found to cherish values
diametrically opposed to those of her village. There
“girls were glassy, worked in offices like men, danced,
smoked, wore high-heeled shoes and narrow slacks and
were free and fast with their favours.” There no one
stands in judgment over another for failure to fulfill
any responsibility. In effect, Jagua feels relieved,
for she cannot be held down to account for her failure
to fulfill her responsibility as a woman and a wife as
has been the case back home. She thus falls into the
open but pernicious arms of the city. She keeps moving
from one situation of desperation to another with
little, if any self-satisfaction. At the Tropicana, a
favorite night spot for the Lagosians, she entertains
varying species of men. With the make-believe lustre of
this degenerate world, it’s dim lighting making
her look even more seductive and beautiful than usual.
All the women wore dresses which
were definitely under size, so that buttocks
and breasts jutted grotesquely above the general
contours of the bodies. At the same time the midriffs
shrunk to suffocation. A dress succeeded if it made
men’s eyes ogle hungrily in this modern super
sex-market. The dancers occupied a tiny floor,
unlighted, so that they became silhouetted bodies
without faces and the most un-athletic man could be
drawn out to attempt the improvisation which went by the
name High-life.
The full effect of her corruption
by the city is fully realized when the villagers of
Ogabu ridicule her values and her standards:
The women fixed their eyes on the
painted eyebrows and one child called out in Ibo
“Mama! Her lips are running blood!... Jagua heard
another woman say, “She walks as if her bottom will
drop off. I cannot understand what the girl has become.
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Jagua’s abandonment to the excesses
of city life only leads to her drifting away from true
self-knowledge. She thus escapes by living momentarily,
intensely, desperately, without use for social
conventions. But upon realizing that the Tropicana was a
mere illusion which she must quickly renounce to attain
a new life, the big change begins in her life.
Jagua thus returns to Ogabu “with
new attitudes, and is rewarded with fulfillment she had
longed for all her life. Her pregnancy is a
gratification of this longing. And for this, Jagua’s joy
is boundless.” Quite significantly the act that led to
her conception takes place in the countryside in “a
shed by the river, a stone’s throw from the shrine.” She
is thus seen reuniting with the land, her roots, which
she had so long rejected and fled from.
Poverty and squalor are both a
cause and an effect of the problems of the city. Just a
glimpse of the house of Aina’s mother tells so
much:
It had looked drab enough in the sun, but now the darkness gave it a quality of musty poverty. The only light came from a street lamp some fifty yards away, though the two houses that flanked it fairly glittered with their own lights. |
Predictably the internal conditions
are worse off:
He could not see his way forward.
With hands outstretched he groped towards what might be
a door. His hand caught against something and he
ducked...Then he realized that the entire floor was
covered with sleeping bodies. He was covered with
sleeping bodies. He was in a kind of bed less open
dormitory. Everyone but the old woman slept on the
floor. Old, young, lovers, enemies, fathers, mothers,
they all shared this hall. From early childhood Aina
had listened to talks about sex, seen bitter
quarrels, heard and perhaps seen adults bare
their passions shamelessly like animals.
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Buraimoh Ajikatu is a
representative of the underdogs in the stifling
economic system of the city. It is ironic that in the
midst of such abundance as are to be expected in such
stores a clerk in a big department store could hardly
have enough to support himself, his four children and
wife. Even to himself it was incomprehensible. He
therefore regards the city as “an enemy, that keeps
raising the prices of its commodities without
increasing his pay; or even when the pay was increased
the prices quickly raced ahead thus worsening the
situation much more than before. His situation is only
redressed when he joins a secret society. Then he
receives a salary increase and the much overdue
promotion with promise of another major one within a
month. He now realizes why all along he had been
subjected to suppression, being the only non-member. And
then:
One night the blow fell.
. . . They
asked him in a matter of fact manner to give them his
first-born son. He protested, asked for an alternative
sacrifice, and when they would not listen threatened to
leave the society. But they told him that he could not
leave. There was a way in, but none out--except through
death. He was terrified, but adamant.
He had told no one of his plight,
and that was when he vanished from home. Now that the
good things of life were his, he would not go back and
tell his wife. All this Sango learnt, and much more
besides. For him it had great significance. By
uncovering this veil, he had discovered where all the
depressed people of the city went for sustenance.
They literally sold their souls to the devil.
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In
Jagua Nana
we are given more insights into the lower reaches of
Lagos life with very gory details of its filth and pain:
A young woman in the
corner of the smelly room seemed to be
making a statement which Freddie had
interrupted. She began bawling swear
words at the young police constable, who
ignored her and kept on writing steadily . .
. other constables were deriving some
lecherous satisfaction from the young
woman’s behavior. She had a defiant
twinkle in her eye, her breath smelled of
alcohol and her blouse--one arm of which had
been in some scuffle--slouched over a naked
young breast with a dare-devil abandon that
could not but be comical. She seemed
by her manner to be conscious of the power
of her femaleness over the males in the
khaki uniforms. Freddie stared at this
ragged woman who confronted him with the
eternal struggle to live, so tragic in the
lower reaches of Lagos life.
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Ekwensi vividly captures the
squalor and
filth:
She stored away the food, then took
out her towel and went to the bathroom, but when
she knocked a man answered her from inside and she went
instead to the lavatory. The same old bucket piled high,
the floor messed about, so she could see nowhere to put
her silver sandals. It was all done by those wretched
children upstairs. Why blame them when their mothers did
not know any better. Where was the landlord? Where was
the Town Council Health Inspector? This Inspector was
supposed to come here once in a while and whenever he
came he made notes in his black book but nothing ever
happened. She would talk seriously to him the next
time. The unpleasant side of Lagos life: the flies in
the lavatory--big and blue and stubborn--settled on
breakfast yam and lunch-time stew (they were invisible
in a stew with greens). But Jagua closed her eyes and
shut her nostrils with her towel.
|
Ekwensi’s works also demonstrate
juvenile delinquency. Beatrice is said to be the one
who promotes it in the city. For as Bayo reveals, she
introduced Suad Zamil to him “and we fell in love.
. . . Of
course we used to meet in her room and she was kind to
us.” The insidious influence of the city on the young
is also brought out through Aina the mature teenage
prostitute who represents the “mad age” and the
mid-teens whose eyes are full of infatuation with life,
Aina fuses within her all the evils of the wild life of
the city, She contributes most to Sango’s depravity. Her
meanness and dishonesty manifested particularly in her penchant for shop-lifting she transfers to Sango and
uses him in many exploitative and destructive ways thus
depriving him of his money and standing between him and
good influences like Elina.
Through Aina and Beatrice we have a
clear view of prostitution. Beatrice, the most sensual
in the novel came from the Eastern Greens, the city of
coal. She became attracted to the city as she herself
said by the need for experiencing high life which to her
includes cars, servants, high-class food, decent
clothes, luxurious living all of which she could only
gain as she recognized by attaching herself to someone
who could. Once in the city she becomes immersed in its
ways as well as promoting it. She herself boasts of
her inordinate sexual appetite as “hot stuff that
Europeans are crazy about.” But then Gunnings the
European with whom she has had three children was not
enough to satisfy her. She then abandons him for Sango.
She flirts indiscriminately with Lajide and Zamil and
later allows her flat to be used as a nest for young
lovers like Bayo and Suad Zamil.
There is also the pitiful case of
Dupeh Mattin who was born and bred in the city with just
primary education and perhaps the first few years of
secondary education but yet knowing all about western
sophistication--make-up, cinema, jazz, and so on.
This kind of girl Sango
knew would be content to walk her shoes thin in the
air-conditioned atmosphere of department stores, to hang
about all day in the foyer of hotels with not a penny in
her handbag, rather than live in the country and marry
Papa’s choice.
In
Jagua Nana,
prostitutes are presented generally as victims of the
city drifting along with it. The young prostitutes go to
the Tropicana daily expecting something to happen that
could put an end to their poverty and starvation. Lagos
therefore is where many others are practically strangers
in a town where everyone there has come to make fast
money by faster means. Its bright lights, its noise, its
suffocation, have in time become her friends. The
Tropicana in time becomes for her “a potent,
habit-forming brew,” which gives her a constant
stock of excitement and gaiety as well as popularity,
and money, though competition inevitably develops
between her and her colleagues in their bid to capture
customers.
Ekwensi also exposes crimes and
shady deals. Sango’s servant therefore warns that Bayo
whom we already know is involved in the underworld of
crime is a bad boy whom one including his master has to
be careful of lest he drags you into trouble. But Sango
apparently does not heed the advice and has to pay the
consequences very dearly. Sango’s room becomes the venue for
the execution of Bayo’s risky plans. So in the end the
C.I.D. raided the apartment and whisked him off.
Jagua’s drift into crime also
enables us to enhance our knowledge of that world in
Jagua Nana. Obanla’s ugliness is shrouded by
the offices of the highly reputed barristers, engineers,
and business men in respectable cloak. In Dennis Odama’s place everything is so dark and mysterious that
Jagua had to spend some time before she could accustom
her eyes to its darkness. All its’ inhabitants pass
time waiting for the night and keeping always on the
alert for the police siren, upon hearing which they
would swiftly climb into their hiding places. For
Dennis, crime has become the only way to earn a living
in a cruel city. As he states when dismissing the
possibility of getting engaged as a clerk:
...I already try to find
work. Dem ask me to bring bribe money.
I give one man ten pound, and he chop de
money and he no fin’ work for me. How
I go do? .I mus’ chop. Myself and de taxi-man who die,
sometime we kin make one hundred pound by Saturday.
Sometime we don’ see anythin’. But we live happy.
. . . We
never look money in de face, an’ say ‘dis money is too
much.’ We jus’ spen’, to get anythin’ we want. Anythin’.
So why I worry? De day dat de policeman catch we, we go.
Is all the same, whedder we live in cell or outside de
cell.
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Ekwensi also confronts his society
with its social injustices and immoralities. This
includes housing problems allied with the
high-handedness and almost inhuman attitude of its
landlords, and the fraudulent means by which the rich
keep enriching themselves at the expense of the poor.
For instance when tenants are thrown out of their
lodgings they become rich meat, as was the case for
Sango, for the ruthless exploiters: the housing agents,
the pimps, and liars who accept money under false
pretenses.
Zamil, the Lebanese, a carefree,
wealthy financier who keeps tossing his money to bait
attractive women is one of those so-called foreign
investors who come into African cities with promises of
bringing in industrialization but who only succeed in
edging the small African traders out of business. They
could even promote misery further by taking a whole
compound and paying its rent for five years in advance
while ten Africans would squeeze into one room, musty,
squalid, and slummy.
Lajide, a local landlord prefers
foreigners as they are willing and able to offer him
“five thousand pounds cash...for a tenancy of five
years.” He is a frivolous spender when in the company
of beautiful women but often stingy and cruel to men. He
has no scruples when it comes to acquiring more money.
He buys stolen military vehicles at reduced rates and
then sells them later at a high profit part of which he
would then use to influence the law in his favor.
Because of his callousness to the less fortunate, Sango
regards him as his “one great obstacle in the
city.”
In
Survive the Peace Ekwensi moves on to examining
the social effects of the Nigerian Civil War which was
fought to prevent the Ibo’s attempt to breakaway from
the federation to form the Republic of Biafra in 1967 to
1968. With the end of the war the devastation was of
such dimension that it was almost unbelievable that the
war itself had ended. Families, tribes, and cultures have
all disintegrated. Deaths have become so common that
mourning becomes pointless. Wives get so entrenched in
harlotry that they couldn’t be redeemed whilst husbands
shirk their marital responsibilities thus causing a
general disruption of family life.
The effort required to survive the
peace becomes greater than that required to survive the
war. Essential commodities become either rare or
prohibitively priced. A chicken which cost fifteen
shillings before was now going for twenty pounds. Life
here is marked by suffering. Whilst some are starving to
death others keep fearing the possible onslaught from
prowling bands of armed bandits who loot and kill. It
is indeed ironical that in the midst of peace many keep
dying and girls are being raped.
The war has not changed anything
for it is both stupid and pointless, being the product
of cursed power-seekers who whilst protecting
themselves send others to be killed. For according to Pa
Ukoha:
When some black men begin
to rule they become too greedy. They eat and
fill their stomachs and the stomachs of
their brothers. That is not enough for them.
They continue till their throats are
filled. And that too is not enough. They
have food in their stomachs and in their
throats and they go on till their mouths are
full and then proceed to fill their bags.
But no one else outside their families or
their tribe must partake of this food. Yet
everybody should have a share in the
food. This is what brings the trouble in
Africa. So, I want to rule - so as to have
my share. You want to rule, to have
your share. Then we start killing
ourselves. God forbid.
|
Ekwensi, in spite of the earlier mentioned shortcomings
has contributed much to the development of African
literature through the wide corpus of works that brought
life in the city so much alive with vivid evocation of
setting along with local colour. He was in fact the
African writer who was most instrumental in the
promotion of Onitsha market literature which in turn
developed both writings and a keen readership in Lagos.
He was also the earliest writer to start writing for
children with such titles as the
Drummer
Boy.
Kole Omotoso past President of
Nigerian Association of Authors and professor of Drama
at University of Ibadan confessed a lifelong fascination
with him after reading his novelette The Yaba
Round about Murder as a child, for, as he confesses, it
taught him the importance of space in writing fiction. Omotoso goes on to state that Ekwensi’s major importance
in Nigerian writing is because he believed in
himself and ‘made us believe in ourselves.’ The
pan-Africanist slant of his writings and his
publications being mostly in Nigeria were found
commendable.
Ekwensi went on to publish several titles as When
Love Whispers,
Divided We Stand,
Jagua Nana's Daughter and
King for Ever! all related to earlier
works.
When Love
Whispers like
Jagua Nana revolves around a very attractive woman with
multiple suitors. But whilst she thinks she has won
the love of her life her father expects her to get
married to an older man in an arranged
marriage.
Divided We Stand (1980) was written in the heat of the Biafra war itself,
though published later. It reverses the received wisdom
that unity is strength, showing how ethnicity, division,
and hatred bring about distrust, displacement, and war
itself.
Jagua Nana's Daughter (1986)
revolves around Jagua’s daughter’s traumatic search for
her mother leading her to find not only her mother but a
partner as well. She is able to get married to a highly
placed professional as she, unlike her mother, is
a professional as well. She thus gains the security and
protection she desires.
King for Ever! (1992) satirises the
desire of African leaders to perpetuate themselves in
power. Sinanda’s rising to power from humble background
does not prevent his vaulting ambition from soaring to
the height where he was now aspiring to godhead.
References
Dathorne, O. R.
The Black Mind A History of African Literature.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1974.
Larson, Charles R.
The Ordeal of the African Writer. London: Zed
Books, 2001.
Lindfors, Bernth, ‘Nigerian
Satirist’ in ALT5
Palmer, Eustace.
The Growth of the African Novel. Studies in African
literature. London: Heinemann, 1979.
* Courtesy of CHICKENBONES
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