The 'ironic' question of Nigerian writing
By Paul Harrison BBC UGC and
Social News
Adichie's Purple Hibiscus was nominated for both the Orange Prize and
Booker Prize in 2004
Thousands of people across
social media have been posting about Nigeria's literary heritage after a
journalist asked acclaimed writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie if there were any
bookshops in her country.
People have tweeted about the
author more than 16,000 times since the question was asked in a public
interview on Thursday evening in Paris.
A response on Friday posted by Adichie
on her Facebook page has drawn a further 13,000 reactions and more than a thousand comments,
and been shared over 3,000 times across the social networking site.
The interview - part of the
Night Of Ideas event, a French government-backed initiative - was broadcast on
Twitter and Facebook by the French Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, and has been viewed nearly 38,000 times.
End of Twitter post by
@francediplo_EN
Journalist Caroline Broue
asked Adichie if people read her books in Nigeria. Adichie replied, "They
do, shockingly."
Broue then asked: "Are
there any bookshops in Nigeria?"
Broue added news in France
about Nigeria was dominated by stories of Boko Haram and violence, and the
bookshop question was an invitation for Adichie to talk about a different
aspect of her country.
Adichie has called for Broue not to be "pilloried"
The author of Americanah and
Purple Hibiscus replied: "I think it reflects very poorly on French people
that you have to ask me that question.
"My books are read in
Nigeria. They are studied in schools. Not just Nigeria, across the continent in
Africa."
End of Twitter post by
@hadekneeyi
Others praised the author's
reply and criticised the journalist's questions, but acknowledged the
"reality" of the perception of Nigeria.
End of Twitter post by
@ronkelawal
End of Twitter post by
@_Fraulious
Some wished to remind people
of Nigeria's literary heritage, by citing writers and poets such as Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and Ben Orki.
In 1986, Soyinka was the first
African to be awarded the Nobel prize for literature. Achebe won the Man Booker International Prize in
2007, beating writers including
Ian McEwan and Salman Rushide.
End of Twitter post by
@MsFisayo
In her Facebook post the day
after the interview, Adichie said Broue was "trying to be ironic,"
which had not worked, and wished that the journalist "would not be
publicly pilloried."
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire