00:00:12
I'm a storyteller and I would like to
00:00:16
tell you a few personal stories about
00:00:17
what I like to call the danger of the
00:00:20
single story I grew up on a university
00:00:24
campus in eastern Nigeria my mother says
00:00:26
that I started reading at the age of two
00:00:28
although I think four is probably close
00:00:31
to the truth so I was an early reader
00:00:34
and what I read were British and
00:00:37
American children's books I was also an
00:00:40
early writer and when I began to write
00:00:43
at about the age of seven stories in
00:00:46
pencil with crayon illustrations that my
00:00:48
poor mother was obligated to read I
00:00:51
wrote exactly the kinds of stories I was
00:00:53
reading all my characters were white and
00:00:57
blue-eyed they played in the snow they
00:01:02
ate apples and they talked a lot about
00:01:06
the weather how lovely it was that the
00:01:08
Sun had come out now this despite the
00:01:13
fact that I lived in Nigeria had never
00:01:15
been outside Nigeria we didn't have snow
00:01:20
we ate mangos and we never talked about
00:01:23
the weather because there was no need my
00:01:26
characters also drank a lot of ginger
00:01:28
beer because the characters and the
00:01:30
British books I read drank ginger beer
00:01:32
never mind that I had no idea what
00:01:35
ginger beer was and for many years
00:01:38
afterwards I would have a desperate
00:01:39
desire to taste ginger beer but that is
00:01:42
another story
00:01:43
what this demonstrates I think is how
00:01:46
impressionable and vulnerable we are in
00:01:49
the face of a story particularly as
00:01:51
children because all I had read were
00:01:54
books in which characters were foreign I
00:01:57
had become convinced that books by the
00:01:59
very nature had to have foreigners in
00:02:02
them and had to be about things with
00:02:04
which I could not personally identify
00:02:06
now things changed when I discovered
00:02:08
African books there weren't many of them
00:02:11
available and they weren't quite as easy
00:02:13
to find as the foreign books but because
00:02:16
of writers like Chinua Achebe on camera
00:02:18
I went through a mental shift in my
00:02:20
perception of literature I realized that
00:02:23
people like me
00:02:24
girls with skin the color of chocolate
00:02:26
whose kinky hair could not form
00:02:29
ponytails could also exist in literature
00:02:31
I started to write about things I
00:02:34
recognized now I loved those American
00:02:38
and British books I read they stared my
00:02:40
imagination the opened up new worlds for
00:02:42
me but the unintended consequence was
00:02:46
that I did not know that people like me
00:02:48
could exist in the choocha so what the
00:02:50
discovery of African writers did for me
00:02:52
was this it saved me from having a
00:02:55
single story of what books are I come
00:02:59
from a conventional middle-class
00:03:01
Nigerian family my father was a
00:03:03
professor
00:03:04
my mother was an administrator and so we
00:03:07
had as was the norm live-in domestic
00:03:10
help who would often come from nearby
00:03:13
rural villages so the year I turned 8 we
00:03:17
got a new house boy
00:03:18
his name was fede the only thing my
00:03:22
mother told us about him was that his
00:03:24
family was very poor my mother sent yams
00:03:28
and rice and our old clothes to his
00:03:31
family and when I didn't finish my
00:03:33
dinner my mother would say finish your
00:03:35
food don't you know people like fides
00:03:37
family have nothing so I felt enormous
00:03:40
pity for fides family but one Saturday
00:03:44
we went to his village to visit and his
00:03:46
mother showed us a beautifully patterned
00:03:48
basket made of dyed raffia that his
00:03:51
brother had made I was startled it had
00:03:55
not occurred to me that anybody and his
00:03:57
family could actually make something all
00:04:01
I had heard about them was how poor they
00:04:03
were so that it had become impossible
00:04:05
for me to see them as anything else but
00:04:07
poor their poverty was my single story
00:04:10
of them years later I thought about this
00:04:14
when I left Nigeria to go to university
00:04:16
in the United States I was 19 my
00:04:20
American roommate was shocked by me she
00:04:24
asked where I had learned to speak
00:04:26
English so well and was confused when I
00:04:28
said that Nigeria happened to have
00:04:30
English as its official lang
00:04:32
she asked if she could listen to what
00:04:35
she called my tribal music and was
00:04:38
consequently very disappointed when I
00:04:40
produced my tape of Mariah Carey she
00:04:45
assumed that I did not know how to use a
00:04:47
stove what struck me was this she had
00:04:51
felt sorry for me even before she saw me
00:04:54
had default position toward me as an
00:04:57
African was a kind of patronizing
00:04:59
well-meaning my roommate had a
00:05:03
single story of Africa a single story of
00:05:06
catastrophe in this single story there
00:05:09
was no possibility of Africans being
00:05:12
similar to her in any way no possibility
00:05:14
of feelings more complex than pity no
00:05:17
possibility of a connection as human
00:05:19
equals I will say that before I went to
00:05:22
the u.s. I didn't consciously identify
00:05:23
as Africa but in the u.s. whenever
00:05:27
Africa came more people turned to me
00:05:28
never mind that I knew nothing about
00:05:30
places like Namibia but I did come to
00:05:33
embrace the sign new identity and in
00:05:35
many ways I think of myself now as
00:05:37
African although I still get quite
00:05:39
irritable when Africa is referred to as
00:05:41
a country the most recent example being
00:05:43
my otherwise wonderful flight from Lagos
00:05:46
two days ago in which there was an
00:05:48
announcement on the virgin flight about
00:05:50
their charity walk in India Africa and
00:05:53
other countries so after I had spent
00:05:57
some years in the US as an African I
00:05:59
began to understand my roommates
00:06:01
response to me if I had not grown up in
00:06:05
Nigeria and if all I knew about Africa
00:06:07
were from popular images I too would
00:06:10
think that Africa was a place of
00:06:12
beautiful landscapes beautiful animals
00:06:15
and incomprehensible people fighting
00:06:18
senseless wars dying of poverty and AIDS
00:06:20
unable to speak for themselves and
00:06:23
waiting to be saved by a kind white
00:06:27
foreigner I would see Africans in the
00:06:30
same way that I as a child had seen
00:06:32
fides family this single story of Africa
00:06:36
ultimately comes I think from Western
00:06:38
literature now here's a quote from the
00:06:41
writing of a London merchant called John
00:06:43
Locke who sailed to West Africa in
00:06:46
1561 and kept a fascinating account of
00:06:49
his voyage after referring to the black
00:06:53
africans as beasts who have no houses he
00:06:56
writes they are also people without
00:06:59
heads having their mouths and eyes in
00:07:02
their breasts now I've laughed every
00:07:05
time I've read this and one must admire
00:07:08
the imagination of John Locke but what
00:07:11
is important about his writing is that
00:07:13
it represents the beginning of a
00:07:15
tradition of telling African stories in
00:07:17
the West a tradition of sub-saharan
00:07:19
Africa as a place of negatives of
00:07:21
difference of darkness of people who in
00:07:24
the words of the wonderful poet Rudyard
00:07:27
Kipling a half devil half child and so I
00:07:32
began to realize that my American
00:07:34
roommate must have throughout her life
00:07:36
seen and heard different versions of the
00:07:39
single story as had a professor who once
00:07:43
told me that my novel was not
00:07:45
authentically African now I was quite
00:07:48
willing to contend that there were a
00:07:50
number of things wrong with the novel
00:07:52
that it had filled in a number of places
00:07:54
but I had not quite imagined that it had
00:07:57
failed at achieving something called
00:07:59
African authenticity in fact I did not
00:08:02
know what African authenticity was the
00:08:06
professor told me that my characters
00:08:07
were too much like him an educated and
00:08:11
middle class man my characters drove
00:08:13
cars they were not starving therefore
00:08:17
they were not authentically African but
00:08:21
I must quickly add that I too am just as
00:08:23
guilty and the question of the single
00:08:25
story a few years ago I visited Mexico
00:08:28
from the US the political climate in the
00:08:32
u.s. at the time was tense and there
00:08:34
were debates going on about immigration
00:08:36
and as often happens in America
00:08:38
immigration became synonymous with
00:08:40
Mexicans there were endless stories of
00:08:43
Mexicans as people who were fleecing the
00:08:47
health care system sneaking across the
00:08:49
border being arrested at the border that
00:08:51
sort of thing I remember walking around
00:08:55
on my first day in Guadalajara
00:08:57
watching the people going to walk ruling
00:09:00
up to tears in the marketplace looking
00:09:02
laughing I remember first feeling slight
00:09:06
surprise and then I was overwhelmed with
00:09:10
shame I realized that I had been so
00:09:13
immersed in the media coverage of
00:09:14
Mexicans that they had become one thing
00:09:17
in my mind the abject immigrant I had
00:09:21
bought into the single story of Mexicans
00:09:22
and I could not have been more ashamed
00:09:24
of myself so that is how to create a
00:09:27
single story show a people as one thing
00:09:30
as only one thing over and over again
00:09:34
and that is what they become it is
00:09:38
impossible to talk about the single
00:09:39
story without talking about power
00:09:42
there is award an award that I think
00:09:45
about whenever I think about the power
00:09:47
structures of the world and it is
00:09:49
uncanny it's a noun that loosely
00:09:51
translates to to be greater than another
00:09:54
like our economic and political walls
00:09:58
stories too are defined by the principle
00:10:01
of an cali how they are told who tells
00:10:04
them when they are told how many stories
00:10:07
are told are really dependent on power
00:10:11
power is the ability not just to tell
00:10:13
the story of another person but to make
00:10:15
it the definitive story of that person
00:10:18
the palestinian poet will read bad news
00:10:21
he writes that if you want to
00:10:22
dispossessed people the simplest way to
00:10:24
do it is to tell their story and to
00:10:27
start with secondly start the story with
00:10:32
the arrows of the Native Americans and
00:10:34
not with the arrival of the British and
00:10:36
you have an entirely different story
00:10:39
start the story with the failure of the
00:10:43
African states and not with the colonial
00:10:45
creation of the African stage and you
00:10:48
have an entirely different story I
00:10:51
recently spoke at a university where a
00:10:54
student told me that it was such a shame
00:10:56
that Nigerian man was were physical
00:11:00
abusers like the father character in my
00:11:02
novel I told him that I had just read a
00:11:05
novel called American Psycho
00:11:08
and and that it was such a shame that
00:11:12
young Americans were serial murderers
00:11:15
now now
00:11:24
now obviously I said this in a fit of
00:11:26
mild irritation but it would never have
00:11:30
occurred to me to think that just
00:11:32
because I had read a novel in which a
00:11:34
character was a serial killer that he
00:11:36
was somehow representative of all
00:11:38
Americans and now this is not because
00:11:40
I'm a better person than that student
00:11:43
but because of America's cultural and
00:11:45
economic power
00:11:46
I had many stories of America I had red
00:11:48
tile and of Dyke and Steinberg and gate
00:11:51
skill I did not have a single story of
00:11:53
America when I learned some years ago
00:11:57
that writers were expected to have had
00:11:59
really unhappy childhoods to be
00:12:02
successful I began to think about how I
00:12:05
could invent horrible things my parents
00:12:06
had done to me but the truth is that I
00:12:11
had a very happy childhood full of
00:12:14
laughter and love in a very close-knit
00:12:15
family but I also had grandfather's who
00:12:18
died in refugee camps my cousin Polly
00:12:21
died because he could not get adequate
00:12:23
health care one of my closest friends
00:12:25
Oklahoma died in a plane crash because
00:12:28
her fire trucks did not have water
00:12:30
I grew up under oppressive military
00:12:33
governments that devalued education so
00:12:35
that sometimes my parents were not paid
00:12:37
their salaries and so as a child I saw
00:12:40
Jam disappear from the breakfast table
00:12:42
then margarine disappeared then bread
00:12:46
became too expensive then milk became
00:12:49
rationed and most of all a kind of
00:12:52
normalized political fear invaded our
00:12:55
lives all of these stories make me who I
00:12:59
am but to insist on only these negative
00:13:03
stories is to flatten my experience and
00:13:06
to overlook the many other stories that
00:13:09
formed me the single story creates
00:13:12
stereotypes and the problem with
00:13:15
stereotypes is not that they are untrue
00:13:18
but that they are incomplete they make
00:13:21
one story become the only story of
00:13:24
course Africa is a continent full of
00:13:26
catastrophes that immense ones such as
00:13:29
the horrific Greeks in Congo and
00:13:31
depressing ones such as the fact that
00:13:33
5000 people apply for one job vacancy in
00:13:36
Nigeria
00:13:37
but there are other stories that are not
00:13:40
about catastrophe and it's very
00:13:42
important it is just as important to
00:13:44
talk about them I've always felt that it
00:13:46
is impossible to engage properly with
00:13:48
the place or a person without engaging
00:13:50
with all of the stories of that place
00:13:53
and that person the consequence of the
00:13:56
single story is this it robs people of
00:13:58
dignity
00:13:59
it makes our recognition of a equal
00:14:02
humanity difficult if emphasizes how we
00:14:05
are different rather than how we are
00:14:07
similar so what it before my Mexican
00:14:10
trip I had followed the immigration
00:14:13
debate from both sides the US and the
00:14:16
Mexican what if my mother had told us
00:14:18
that fides family was poor and had
00:14:21
walking what if we had an African
00:14:24
television network that broadcast
00:14:26
diverse African stories all over the
00:14:28
world what the Nigerian writer Chino
00:14:30
h-e-b calls a balance of stories what if
00:14:34
my roommate knew about my Nigerian
00:14:36
publisher Mukhtar Bukhari a remarkable
00:14:39
man who left his job in a bank to follow
00:14:41
his dream and start a publishing house
00:14:43
now the conventional wisdom was that
00:14:45
Nigerians don't read literature he
00:14:47
disagreed he felt that people who could
00:14:51
read would read if you made literature
00:14:53
affordable and available to them shortly
00:14:57
after he published my first novel I went
00:14:59
to a TV station in Lagos to do an
00:15:01
interview and a woman who worked there
00:15:03
as a messenger came up to me and said I
00:15:05
really liked your novel I didn't like
00:15:07
the ending now you must write a sequel
00:15:09
and this is what will happen
00:15:13
and she went on to tell me what to write
00:15:15
in the sequel now I was not only charmed
00:15:18
I was very moved here was a woman part
00:15:21
of the ordinary masses of Nigerians who
00:15:23
were not supposed to be readers she had
00:15:26
not only read the book but she had taken
00:15:27
ownership of it and felt justified and
00:15:30
telling me what to write in the sepal
00:15:32
now what if my roommate knew about my
00:15:35
friend for me under a fearless woman who
00:15:38
hosts the TV show in Lagos and is
00:15:40
determined to tell the stories that we
00:15:42
prefer to forget what if my roommate
00:15:44
knew about the heart procedure that was
00:15:47
performed in the legals Hospital last
00:15:49
week what if my roommate knew about
00:15:51
contemporary Nigerian music talented
00:15:54
people singing in English and pigeon and
00:15:56
EMU and Yoruba and I Joe Mixon
00:15:59
influences from jay-z and Fela to Bob
00:16:03
Marley to their grandfathers what if my
00:16:06
roommate knew about the female lawyer
00:16:08
who recently went to court in Nigeria to
00:16:10
challenge a ridiculous law that required
00:16:12
women to get their husbands consent
00:16:15
before renewing their passports what if
00:16:18
my roommate knew about Nollywood full of
00:16:21
innovative people making films despite
00:16:23
great technical odds films so popular
00:16:26
that they really are the best example of
00:16:29
Nigerians consuming what they produce
00:16:31
what if my roommate knew about my
00:16:33
wonderfully ambitious hair braider who
00:16:35
has just started her own business
00:16:36
selling hair extensions all about the
00:16:39
millions of other Nigerians who start
00:16:41
businesses and sometimes feel but
00:16:43
continue to nurse ambition every time I
00:16:47
am home I'm confronted with the usual
00:16:49
sources of irritation for most Nigerians
00:16:51
our field infrastructure our field
00:16:53
government but also by the incredible
00:16:56
resilience of people who thrive despite
00:16:59
the government rather than because of it
00:17:02
I teach writing workshops in Lagos every
00:17:05
summer and it is amazing to me how many
00:17:07
people apply how many people are eager
00:17:10
to write to tell stories my Nigerian
00:17:14
publisher and I have just started a
00:17:16
nonprofit called Farah FINA trust and we
00:17:19
have big dreams of building libraries
00:17:21
and refurbishing libraries that already
00:17:23
exist and providing books
00:17:26
state schools that don't have anything
00:17:27
in their libraries and also of
00:17:29
organizing lots and lots of workshops
00:17:31
and reading and writing for all the
00:17:33
people who are eager to tell are many
00:17:35
stories stories matter many stories
00:17:38
matter stories have been used to dis
00:17:41
possess and to malign but stories can
00:17:44
also be used to empower and to humanize
00:17:48
stories can break the dignity of the
00:17:51
people but stories can also repair that
00:17:53
broken dignity the American writer Alice
00:17:57
Walker wrote this about them her
00:17:59
southern relatives who had moved to the
00:18:00
north and she introduced them to a book
00:18:03
about the southern life that they had
00:18:05
left behind they sat around reading the
00:18:09
book themselves listening to me with the
00:18:12
book and the kind of paradise was
00:18:15
regained I would like to end with this
00:18:18
thought that when we reject the single
00:18:22
story when we realize that there is
00:18:24
never a single story about any place we
00:18:28
regain a kind of paradise thank you
00:18:31
[Applause]