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Fifty Years of the Nigerian Novel, 1951-2000

Over the past fifty years, the Nigerian novel has grown to more than a hundred titles. This may appear to be rather a handful, considering the relatively long stretch of time. The fact is that not many have tried their hands at the occupation, or gone beyond the first book. It probably goes to show that writing is no easy occupation. What may be more remarkable is that relatively few, out of that handful, is known by the reading public, or discussed by the critics. Of course, it is t he task of the critics to tell us which of the titles to treat as literature, and why. Therefore, part of the reason why the reading public seems to know very little beyond what had been read as part of certificate examinations in literature must be that t he critics hav e not always played their part satisfactorily. A literary work needs to be widely discussed and presented in a variety of contexts to catch the attention of the reading public. Another reason is one often mentioned, which is that the Nigeria educational n system has not been successful in training the people who pass through it in the discipline of reading. Many a secondary school educated Nigerian has been able to pass his examinations in literature by studying publications of the questionan danswer type, which are coming out all the time, and are therefore relatively inexpensive. Undoubtedly, this sort of reading matter may help to focus the minds of the young learners on the facts which they must supply in order to achieve success and to th e kinds of iss them. tasks is ues that the examiners require of However, reading for the gathering of information relevant for specific only an aspect of the training regime, and it can do real harm if it lacks the support of reading as a continuous exercis Teaching a e. t the secondary school level should aim at giving the student good quality education.

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Prospects

ThehistoryoftheNigeriannoveloverthepastfiftyyearsdoesreflecta high level of awareness of events in the public sphere. Hence thebulk of scholarly work on this novel seems to take for granted that it isabout those events. There is, of course, a sense in which the history ofliterary scholarship gives warrant for linking literary activity to such'outside facts.' For instance, the Enlightenment, Tory pessimism, andVictorianismareperiod markersandmoodswhicharesometimesused as terms of classification in English literary studies. But these arepurelyexternalmarkers.Thespecificinterrelationshipsholdingbetween the literature and the period are often asserted and justifiedspeculatively. If there were necessity in these relationships, literary artwould be predictable. But the behaviour of literature throughout itshistory seems to follow no clear patterns of relationship to the 'outsidefacts'. The Enlightenment may serve for illustration. This was the ageofMoliereandRacine,bothoutstandingclassicists,whoseart,therefore, seemed to presuppose a highly cultured audience, hardly thesections of society mostin need ofenlightenment. It is quite as ifintheworkoftheseclassicistsliteraturehaditsbacktotheactualhistorical moment. Such is equally the case with Tory pessimism, as itkeptpacewithanAugustanpoetrythatsoughtancestryinandrecuperatedthe cadenceoftheliterature ofimperialRome.

Ifthe bulkofliterary scholarship inNigeriatakes forgrantedthat the novel showing awareness of the public event means that it isabout this event, the correlation is either a peculiarity of the Nigeriannovel, or it fails to capture the exact nature of the relationship inquestion. One of the consequences of correlating art in this way toexperienced reality is that art becomes a secondary and dependentprocess. It must then find a way to justify itself, and show why it maydemand serious attention. The question would be, what is art if it onlyrepeatswhatis,whetherasphotographicdocumentationorascaricature? In the historical community, a current of thought suggestsforanexplanationoftherashofdictatorshipsthroughoutAfricafrom

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thelate1960sto the1990sthathistoriographyhadacceptedoraltradition in the reconstruction of history during the colonial period andthat of the anti-colonial struggle. The result was that 'heroes' werecreated out of the leaders associated with the rise and fall of ancientAfrican kingdoms. Consequently, modern African leaders saw theirrolesintermsofthelegendaryheroesgivenrecognitionasthesavioursoftheircommunities.

ItisclaimedforAfricanhistoriography,therefore,thatitsforemostproductionwasthehero,aliterary/fictionalcategory.Subsequently,authoritarianregimesarosebyimitationofthelegendary heroes, followed by the literature that draws its raison d'êtrefrom experiences in the public sphere. If history is what produces theforms of experienced reality, and the experienced reality in turn givesrisetowhattakesplaceinliterature,historywouldbetheprimemover.Astoliterature—wemustextendPlato'smetaphoralittle—itisatathirdremovefromthe origin.

Often the ethical criticism of characters in the African novel hasbeen in terms of his success or failure to live up to the destiny of thelegendary hero as a redeemer or transformer of his society. However,thereisnothinginthehistoryofliteraturewhichdemandsthatfictional characters should be heroes in that sense or that literature andartshouldbeaderivedpractice.Forinstance,theriseofGreektragedy was at the time when Athens was the great imperial power inthe Eastern Mediterranean. Similarly, Victorian optimism correlates tothehumanisttheorythathumanbeingsareimprovable,andthatliterature is a powerful tool in achieving this. This optimism is notnecessarily reflected in the structure of the Victorian novel or in thediscursive patterns of the novels of the period. In our own context,what proves that the Nigerian novel does not necessarily correlate tothe real is precisely the demand which became vociferous at the closeof the 1970s that literature be socially engaged. If the literary artistsansweredthiscall,itwascertainlynotsustained.Thereappearstohave been a sharp and prolonged decline in the number of literarynovels published from about 1983 to the very close of the twentiethcentury.

Ourreflectionon theNigeriannovelin thisbookdoesnot make agreatdealoftheissueofpublicaffairs.Ratheritisguidedmainlyby

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the search for literary values, such as symbolic forms by virtue ofwhich the work gives rise to and feeds thought. Where public affairsare encountered, it is in terms of discursive formations. The prospectsof the novel over the next fifty years will probably be better served ifliterary scholarship resists the temptation to be prescriptive, beyonddemanding that what is written or published be art, that the work beabletosustaindiscussion.Minimally,thisentailsthatthenovelexceeds any set of statements claimed to be its meaning. It also entailsthat the interpretations can and ought to change over time. In line withthis rule, our interpretations of the works of the tradition over the pastfiftyyearshavecertainlynotsoughttorestatetheestablishedpositions. We have sought to reopen these works to new efforts ofreading,interpretation, discussion, andevendiscovery.