120 likes | 184 Views
Wole Soyinka and Post Colonialism. What is Colonialism?. Political Domination of Another People Their leaders cannot make decisions that aren’t agreed upon by British The Establishment of a Government Often figure head rulers are set up to placate the masses, but power remains with British
E N D
What is Colonialism? • Political Domination of Another People • Their leaders cannot make decisions that aren’t agreed upon by British • The Establishment of a Government • Often figure head rulers are set up to placate the masses, but power remains with British • Large-Scale Religious Conversion • Christianity becomes the only acceptable, civilized religion • Forced Economic Dependence • Trade happens, but usually raw materials taken for a cheap price from colony and more refined items sold back to colony from Britain at a much higher price • The Building of an Infrastructure (roads, railroads, hospitals, schools, etc.)
Justifications for Colonialism • Economic • Colonialism provided a huge natural resource base for small European powers • Colonies provided ready markets for finished products • Religious: The need to spread Christianity • Cultural: “The White Man’s Burden” • Because British felt they were more civilized and had the only correct religion, they felt it was imperative that they go out and get everyone else to conform for the sake of their souls.
Post Colonial Africa Nigeria
Nigeria • Largest country in Africa (130,000,000) • 50% Muslim, 40% Christian, 10% Traditional • Comprised of various tribal societies with independent cultures and histories. • Yoruba • Igbo • Hausa
Nigerian Literature • Nigeria is one of the most divided nations in the world, both religiously and tribally • Consequently, it has had an extremely difficult time cohering together as a nation • It has also given birth to two of the most important modern writers in the world: Wole Soyinka (Yoruba) and Chinua Achebe (Igbo)—both of whom have had to write in English in order to reach the majority of people in their own country.
Wole Soyinka • Educated in Europe, especially in the works of Shakespeare. • Later adopted the traditional Yoruba religion. • Worked in his dramas to combine Yoruba traditions with Western literary forms. • Won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1986.
The Duty of the African Writer • To incorporate the pre-colonial mythos of the people into literature • To acknowledge the effect that colonialism has had on the culture • To help to forge a new national identity that combines pre-colonial and postcolonial elements into something new and independent.
Death and the King’s Horseman • Based on a true event that happened in 1946. • Dramatizes the conflict between the pre-colonial and the colonial that is at the heart of postcolonialism. • Uses a definition of “tragedy” that combines Western ideas with Yoruba myths: tragedy seen as transition