Naipaul's Latest Book on 'The Masque of Africa: Glimpse of African Belief'

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Chambi Chachage

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Aug 29, 2010, 11:36:50 AM8/29/10
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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Errol Harry <errolh...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
Subject: Naipaul's latest book on Africa

The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review

Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing Nobel Prize winner’s punishing quest to expose Africa’s religious illusions

 

By Sameer Rahim
Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010

Comments

The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul

V S Naipaul’s father was once forced to sacrifice a goat to the Hindu goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul had written an article in the Trinidad Guardian criticising Hindu farmers who ignored government regulations and inoculated their cattle with religious rites.

His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he offered up a severed goat’s head on a brass plate.

 

In that Sunday’s paper he was all bluster: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No Poison last night”. But this “great humiliation”, as his son wrote in Finding the Centre (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk into depression. According to Naipaul’s mother, “He looked in the mirror one day and couldn’t see himself. And he began to scream.”

Over the course of his long writing career, V S Naipaul’s view of religion has moved – much like this story – from the potentially comic to the outright sinister. His first published novel, The Mystic Masseur (1957), was a satire on a fake pundit. In his masterpiece A House for Mr Biswas (1961) the title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his excrement. His travel book on India, An Area of Darkness (1964), took a harsher view of Hinduism and the caste system and after 1970, when he first learnt about his father’s ritual humiliation (the family had kept it an absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.

Among the Believers (1981) and Beyond Belief (1998) blamed the problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam. Third World peoples who refused to abandon their ancestral illusions for the civilised and secular values of the West – as Naipaul has so conspicuously done – are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.

Now he has travelled to six countries – Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria, the Ivory Coast, Gabon and South Africa – to discover the “nature of African belief”. The Masque of Africa starts in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, where Naipaul immediately observes a conflict between the native religion, offering “only the world of the spirits and the ancestors”, and the foreign religions (Islam and Christianity) whose new places of worship on the city’s hills are like “an applied and contagious illness, curing nothing, giving no final answers… fighting wrong battles, narrowing the mind”. He does not visit these mosques and churches; a view from the foothills is enough.

When Naipaul does visit somewhere his observations can be acute. At the shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the 19th-century ruler who had dealings with John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a “sense of wonder”. But nearby he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide assures him the boy is just playing. “I didn’t believe him,” Naipaul says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that nine men were sacrificed at the shrine during its construction.

For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the faithful, before widening his vision to examine what they chose not to see.

Naipaul has always been able to spot a fraud, and the best writing in this book deals with native healers and fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a small office and spots a framed certificate on the wall: the witch doctor has an official licence so that “no believer need feel ashamed”. In Nigeria he teases a fortune-teller by asking whether or not his daughter will get married (Naipaul has no children). The man replies that she is cursed and that only a fee will release her. “But what he’s told me is good,” says a straight-faced Naipaul. “I don’t want the girl to get married.”

He shows a touching sympathy for animals: tormented kittens are a running theme, along with mistreated horses and hunted bush animals (the forest is “like a free supermarket, open to everyone”). When he finds a house in Ghana with well-treated pets, he softens: “I began to be prejudiced in favour of the house.”

But mostly Naipaul comes across here as tired and tetchy, complaining about being overcharged by his guides and the bad hotels (“the broken safe, the dusty refrigerator”). From his car window he sees children walking home from school in Uganda and comments, in what seems like a parody of Naipaulian pessimism, that “education and school uniforms, giving an illusion of possibility, was easy; much harder was the creation of a proper economy”. We learn that the “Nigerian mindset … resisted rationality” and that Chinese logging companies are motivated by a “hatred of the earth”.

The one humorous moment in the book is marred by self-pity and a predictable dig at the locals. On the way to see some ancestral bones in Gabon, his “nervy, frail” legs give way and he falls to the ground. His guide brings a wheelbarrow. “But it was an African job, heavily rusted, and not sturdy, sagging below my weight when, leaning back far too much, I tried unsuccessfully to sit in it.”

It is puzzling why Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul, at the age of 78, continues to punish himself with such travels. Perhaps, like his father, he is worried about what he sees when he looks in the mirror. Is he the Nobel Prize-winning sage who has written 30 acclaimed books over 50 years? Or is he a fraud, pretending to be a country gentleman in Wiltshire when his true home is among the wretched of the earth? He has seen through superstition and religion; he has exposed political idealism and racial nationalism. But his scepticism is so entrenched that his work is now cleansed of humour, imagination and human sympathy.

The final line of The Masque of Africa claims that in post-apartheid South Africa “a resolution is not really possible until the people who wish to impose themselves on Africa violate some essential part of their being”. Naipaul’s imposing achievement has violated an essential part of his being. There is something deeply sad about watching him in the African forest, a wounded animal, looking for a final vindication of his own painful journey.

The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African Belief by V S Naipaul

kenneth harrow

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Aug 29, 2010, 1:10:00 PM8/29/10
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naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our time. a bend in the river evokes every negative stereotype about africans imaginable; his cover? 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized. uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward africa, and the rest of the third world. really
ken harrow






At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Errol Harry <errolh...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
Subject: Naipaul's latest book on Africa


The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review




Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing Nobel Prize winner’s punishing quest to expose Africa’s religious illusions



 

By Sameer Rahim
Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010

Comments
The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul  
The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul

V S Naipaul’s father was once forced to sacrifice a goat to the Hindu goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul had written an article in the Trinidad Guardian criticising Hindu farmers who ignored government regulations and inoculated their cattle with religious rites.

His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he offered up a severed goat’s head on a brass plate.
 

In that Sunday’s paper he was all bluster: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No Poison last night†. But this “great humiliation†, as his son wrote in Finding the Centre (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk into depression. According to Naipaul’s mother, “He looked in the mirror one day and couldn’t see himself. And he began to scream.â€

Over the course of his long writing career, V S Naipaul’s view of religion has moved – much like this story – from om the potentially comic to the outright sinister. His first published novel, The Mystic Masseur (1957), was a satire on a fake pundit. In his masterpiece A House for Mr Biswas (1961) the title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his excrement. His travel book on India, An Area of Darkness (1964), took a harsher view of Hinduism and the caste system and after 1970, when he first learnt about his father’s ritual humiliation (the family had kept it an absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.

Among the Believers (1981) and Beyond Belief (1998) blamed the problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam. Third World peoples who refused to abandon their ancestral illusions for the civilised and secular values of the West – as Naipaul has so cconspicuously done – are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.

Now he has travelled to six countries – Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria, the Ivory Coast, Gabon and South Africa – to discover the “œnature of African belief†. The Masque of Africa starts in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, where Naipaul immediately observes a conflict between the native religion, offering “only the world of the spirits and the ancestors†, and the foreign religions (Islam and Christianity) whose new places of worship on the city’s hills are like “an applied and contagious illness, curing nothing, giving no final answers… fighting wrong battles, narrowing the mind†. He doess not visit these mosques and churches; a view from the foothills is enough.

When Naipaul does visit somewhere his observations can be acute. At the shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the 19th-century ruler who had dealings with John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a “sense of wonder†. But nearby he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide assures him the boy is just playing. “I didn’t believe him,†Naipaul says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that nine men were sacrificed at the shrine during its construction.

For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the faithful, before widening his vision to examine what they chose not to see.

Naipaul has always been able to spot a fraud, and the best writing in this book deals with native healers and fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a small office and spots a framed certificate on the wall: the witch doctor has an official licence so that “no believer need feel ashamed†. In Nigeria he teases a fortune-teller by asking whether or not his daughter will get married (Naipaul has no children). The man replies that she is cursed and that only a fee will release her. “But what he’s told me is good,†says a straight-faced Naipaul. “I don’t want the girl to get married.â€

He shows a touching sympathy for animals: tormented kittens are a running theme, along with mistreated horses and hunted bush animals (the forest is “like a free supermarket, open to everyone†). When he finds a house in Ghana with well-treated pets, he softens: “I began to be prejudiced in favour of the house.â€

But mostly Naipaul comes across here as tired and tetchy, complaining about being overcharged by his guides and the bad hotels (“the broken safe, the dusty refrigerator†). From his car window he sees children walking home from school in Uganda and comments, in what seems like a parody of Naipaulian pessimism, that “education and school uniforms, giving an illusion of possibility, was easy; much harder was the creation of a proper economy†. We learn that the “Nigerian mindset … resisted rationality†and that Chinese logging companies are motivated by a “hatred of the earth†.

The one humorous moment in the book is marred by self-pity and a predictable dig at the locals. On the way to see some ancestral bones in Gabon, his “nervy, frail†legs give way and he falls to the ground. His guide brings a wheelbarrow. “But it was an African job, heavily rusted, and not sturdy, sagging below my weight when, leaning back far too much, I tried unsuccessfully to sit in it.â€

It is puzzling why Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul, at the age of 78, continues to punish himself with such travels. Perhaps, like his father, he is worried about what he sees when he looks in the mirror. Is he the Nobel Prize-winning sage who has written 30 acclaimed books over 50 years? Or is he a fraud, pretending to be a country gentleman in Wiltshire when his true home is among the wretched of the earth? He has seen through superstition and religion; he has exposed political idealism and racial nationalism. But his scepticism is so entrenched that his work is now cleansed of humour, imagination and human sympathy.

The final line of The Masque of Africa claims that in post-apartheid South Africa “a resolution is not really possible until the people who wish to impose themselves on Africa violate some essential part of their being†. Naipaul’s imposing achievement has violated an essential part of his being. There is something deeply sad about watching him in the African forest, a wounded animal, looking for a final vindication of his own painful journey.
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Kenneth W. Harrow
Distinguished Professor of English
Michigan State University
har...@msu.edu
517 803-8839
fax 517 353 3755

xok...@yahoo.com

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Aug 29, 2010, 2:57:28 PM8/29/10
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Oga Kenn,

It is hard to defend Naipaul. Achebe already deconstructed Naipaul's demons and I couldn't agree with him more. But I must say, it is time to move from yelling at racists, real or imagined, to yelling at ourselves. Naipaul's A Bend in the River was written over four decades ago. It is easy to say that today, Sub-Saharan Africa may have regressed from that point in time. Why are things the way they are? We get defensive and yell: Can't you see, we are human like you, we wear suits, we eat ice cream with cutlery! Mimicry is our best defense against charges of our human ineptitude. Our leaders can barely sustain what passes for modern society, even when they are given all the resources. They steal it. Mimicry is all we know about. I asked a Kenyan professor on this list why Kenya is producing a "constitution" when the bulk of his people will not know one if it is pressed against their noses and he sputtered with savage rage. Don't you know all civilized societies have one of those, he lectured me with savage condescension. What is wrong with us? That is the same country where racist liberals were weeping with joy that they could mount used books on camels and make them go up some hill to feed destitute peasants literature. Let us face it: What is racist about pointing out that much of Africa is a farce today, many thanks to us her intellectuals and leaders?

Sameer Raheem seems to be musing more about the African intellectual when he observes this about Naipaul:


"Perhaps, like his father, he is worried about what he sees when he looks in the mirror. Is he the Nobel Prize-winning sage who has written 30 acclaimed books over 50 years? Or is he a fraud, pretending to be a country gentleman in Wiltshire when his true home is among the wretched of the earth?"

Mimicry, that is what should be our middle name, frauds pretending to be country gentlemen even as we ignore the travails of our fellow wretched of the earth.

Oga Kenn, I have been reading about Vietnam and the brilliance and resilience of Ho Chi Minh in resisting every superior force of invasion from the French to the Chinese to the Americans you name it. You know the history of America's misadventures in Vietnam and how leadership can energise, educate and invigorate even the most destitute peasant to fight for his or her land. When you compare Ho Chi Minh to even our most revered African icons, I come to the robust conclusion that it is not our fault. The black continent is cursed by a most racist God, a narcissus that has separated us from the rest of humanity and clamped us in chains of degradation. I shall not worship him. Indeed I spit on his numerous temples. In the name of my ancestors! And yes a pox on all of Naipaul's houses!

- Ikhide

Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T


From: kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 13:10:00 -0400
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Naipaul's Latest Book on 'The Masque of Africa: Glimpse of African Belief'

Moses Ebe Ochonu

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Aug 29, 2010, 4:07:48 PM8/29/10
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Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and sustain personal relationships with his literary peers, crossing people left and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist universalism.

The man deserves more pity than engagement.
--
There is enough in the world for everyone's need but not for everyone's greed.


---Mohandas Ghandi

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Aug 30, 2010, 8:40:03 AM8/30/10
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I have not yet read Naipaul's latest but from the comments on this
page and the Guardian's review, my expectations are great:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-africa-review

Jonathan Franzen may write with the principle in mind, that “The
reader is a friend, not an adversary, not a spectator.” - and perhaps
this is also Naipual's operative approach, since we can tell by his
book sales that he does have a very large and appreciative readership.
Is it safe to conclude then that he panders to the appetite and
expectations of his faithful fans/readers who want some more of the
same or must we credit him with being absolutely faithful to his own
experience, his own perceptions, like the true literary artist and
essayist he is?

Or is there no such thing?

I remember in 2001, when it was announced that V.S. had been awarded
the Nobel Prize in Literature. I called up two friends, one a great
intellectual from Guadeloupe and the other from Jamaica, to
congratulate them They both said exactly the same thing, one
word:”Collie-man”, which is a Carribean's derogatory description of an
Indian. Naipaul had already pissed them off.

In as far as biographical heresy can be applied to throw light on Mr.
Naipaul's literary output, Paul Theroux's “Sir Vidia's Shadow” has
given the most unkindest cut of all.

Paul Theroux should know. Had Sir Vidia written his ( Theroux's) “
Fong and the Indians” someone would have seen racism in the depiction
of Africans in that novel and perhaps cried, where I laughed at what I
thought was funny

Whether it is with V.S.'s “An Area of Darkness” - written about his
visit to his ancestral India, or his post-Salman Rushdie “Among the
Believers”about Islam and Islamists or the much referred to and in my
opinion innocuous “ A Bend in The River” one of Naipaul's functions
then is to prick us to some critical self-examination as Lord Ikhide
has just done. And for that should Naipaul - or his brother Shiva
Naipaul ( North of South”) be blighted?

Professor Harrow sounds remarkably like my dear Dr. Valentine Ojo when
he says what he says about V..S: Naipaul.

Perhaps, if Naipual had been Black instead of Brown, African, instead
of an Indian British Lord examining other cultures from the
perspective of a higher (the standards of Western Civilisation), and
seeing Africa and India through the lens of his higher culture, we
would not be accusing him of racism.

What then would we be accusing him – on the basis of his written word?
Arrogance?
The sort of cynicism that Evelyn Waugh has been accused of?
What?
I pause for a reply.


On Aug 29, 10:07 pm, Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and
> sustain personal relationships with his literary peers, crossing people left
> and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't
> help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist
> universalism.
>
> The man deserves more pity than engagement.
>
>
>
> On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
> >  naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our time. a bend in the
> > river evokes every negative stereotype about africans imaginable; his cover?
> > 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was
> > regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> > uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> > naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward
> > africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> > ken harrow
>
> > At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
>
> > ----- Forwarded Message ----
> > *From:* Errol Harry <errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> > *Sent:* Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> > *Subject:* Naipaul's latest book on Africa
>
> > *The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review*
>
> > *Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing Nobel Prize winner’s punishing
> > quest to expose Africa’s religious illusions *
>
> > By Sameer Rahim
> > Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
>
> >  Comments<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>
> > [image: The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul]
> > The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
>
> > V S Naipaul’s father was once forced to sacrifice a goat to the Hindu
> > goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul
> > had written an article in the *Trinidad Guardian* criticising Hindu
> > farmers who ignored government regulations and inoculated their cattle with
> > religious rites.
>
> > His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he
> > appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing
> > trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he
> > offered up a severed goat’s head on a brass plate.
>
> > In that Sunday’s paper he was all bluster: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No
> > Poison last night†. But this “great humiliation†, as his son wrote in
> > *Finding the Centre* (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk
> > into depression. According to Naipaul’s mother, “He looked in the mirror
> > one day and couldn’t see himself. And he began to scream.â€
>
> > Over the course of his long writing career, V S Naipaul’s view of
> > religion has moved – much like this story – from om the potentially comic to
> > the outright sinister. His first published novel, *The Mystic Masseur *(1957),
> > was a satire on a fake pundit. In his masterpiece *A House for Mr Biswas*(1961) the title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his
> > training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his
> > excrement. His travel book on India, *An Area of Darkness* (1964), took a
> > harsher view of Hinduism and the caste system and after 1970, when he first
> > learnt about his father’s ritual humiliation (the family had kept it an
> > absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.
>
> > *Among the Believers* (1981) and *Beyond Belief* (1998) blamed the
> > problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam.
> > Third World peoples who refused to abandon their ancestral illusions for the
> > civilised and secular values of the West – as Naipaul has so cconspicuously
> > done – are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.
>
> > Now he has travelled to six countries – Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria, the Ivory
> > Coast, Gabon and South Africa – to discover the “œnature of African
> > belief†. *The Masque of Africa* starts in Kampala, the capital of
> > The final line of *The Masque of Africa* claims that in post-apartheid
> > South Africa “a resolution is not really possible until the people who
> > wish to impose themselves on Africa violate some essential part of their
> > being†. Naipaul’s imposing achievement has violated an essential part of
> > his being. There is something deeply sad about watching him in the African
> > forest, a wounded animal, looking for a final vindication of his own painful
> > journey.
> >  The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African Belief<http://books.telegraph.co.uk/BerteShopWeb/viewProduct.do?ISBN=9780330...>by V S Naipaul

Chidi Anthony Opara

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Aug 30, 2010, 7:29:08 AM8/30/10
to USA Africa Dialogue Series
“naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our
time. a bend in the river evokes every negative
stereotype about africans imaginable…………..”

…………….Ken Harrow

Have Napaul and his paymasters not succeeded in pummeling our self
esteem?
In my opinion, they have. We must for instance, apply and win all
those neo-colonial Literary prizes to be relevant as writers and in
order to win these prizes, we must write what the promoters of these
prizes want us to write and the way they want it written.

We are still under imperialism and we are doing nothing about it
except to rave at mouthpieces of imperialism, the Napauls of this
earth.

Chidi Anthony Opara

http://www.chidiopararesume.blogspot.com


On Aug 29, 6:10 pm, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
> naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our
> time. a bend in the river evokes every negative
> stereotype about africans imaginable; his cover?
> 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and
> before it, lumumba's, was regarded by naipaul's
> kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british
> snobbism and racism toward africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> ken harrow
>
> At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> >----- Forwarded Message ----
> >From: Errol Harry <errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> >Sent: Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> >Subject: Naipaul's latest book on Africa
>
> >The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review
>
> >Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing Nobel
> >Prize winner’s punishing quest to expose Africa’s religious illusions
>
> >By Sameer Rahim
> >Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
>
> ><http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>Comments
> ><http://books.telegraph.co.uk/BerteShopWeb/viewProduct.do?ISBN=9780330...>The
> >Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African Belief by V S Naipaul
>
> >--
> >You received this message because you are
> >subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series"
> >moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
> >For current archives, visit
> ><http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue>http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
> >For previous archives, visit
> ><http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html>http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
> >To post to this group, send an email to USAAfric...@googlegroups.com
> >To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
> >unsub...@googlegroups.com
>
> Kenneth W. Harrow
> Distinguished Professor of English
> Michigan State University
> har...@msu.edu
> 517 803-8839
> fax 517 353 3755- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

kenneth harrow

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Aug 30, 2010, 10:21:36 AM8/30/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com
dear cornelius
i wonder what racism would look like if not what
naipaul has written over all these years; he has
consistently constructed the most derogatory
images of africas, of dark skinned peoples in the
caribbean and in india. he writes as a brahmin, a
superior civilized being, who points out the
barbarism of those who have not attained what he considers civilization.
he does so by constructing characters whose
failings are linked to their skin color,
consistently, over and over, from the early writings down to the later ones.
i repeat my question, if he is not racist, if his
characterizations are not racist, what would racism look like?
ken

At 08:40 AM 8/30/2010, you wrote:
>I have not yet read Naipaul's latest but from the comments on this
>page and the Guardian's review, my expectations are great:
>
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-africa-review
>

> Jonathan Franzen may write with the principle in mind, that “The
>reader is a friend, not an adversary, not a spectator.†- and perhaps


>this is also Naipual's operative approach, since we can tell by his
>book sales that he does have a very large and appreciative readership.
>Is it safe to conclude then that he panders to the appetite and
>expectations of his faithful fans/readers who want some more of the
>same or must we credit him with being absolutely faithful to his own
>experience, his own perceptions, like the true literary artist and
>essayist he is?
>
>Or is there no such thing?
>
>I remember in 2001, when it was announced that V.S. had been awarded
>the Nobel Prize in Literature. I called up two friends, one a great
>intellectual from Guadeloupe and the other from Jamaica, to
>congratulate them They both said exactly the same thing, one

>word:†Collie-man†, which is a Carribean's derogatory description of an


>Indian. Naipaul had already pissed them off.
>
>In as far as biographical heresy can be applied to throw light on Mr.

>Naipaul's literary output, Paul Theroux's “Sir Vidia's Shadow†has


>given the most unkindest cut of all.
>

>Paul Theroux should know. Had Sir Vidia written his ( Theroux's) “
>Fong and the Indians†someone would have seen racism in the depiction


>of Africans in that novel and perhaps cried, where I laughed at what I
>thought was funny
>

>Whether it is with V.S.'s “An Area of Darkness†- written about his
>visit to his ancestral India, or his post-Salman Rushdie “Among the
>Believers†about Islam and Islamists or the much referred to and in my
>opinion innocuous “ A Bend in The River†one of Naipaul's functions


>then is to prick us to some critical self-examination as Lord Ikhide
>has just done. And for that should Naipaul - or his brother Shiva

>Naipaul ( North of South†) be blighted?


>
>Professor Harrow sounds remarkably like my dear Dr. Valentine Ojo when
>he says what he says about V..S: Naipaul.
>
>Perhaps, if Naipual had been Black instead of Brown, African, instead
>of an Indian British Lord examining other cultures from the
>perspective of a higher (the standards of Western Civilisation), and
>seeing Africa and India through the lens of his higher culture, we
>would not be accusing him of racism.
>

>What then would we be accusing him ­ on the basis of his written woord?


>Arrogance?
>The sort of cynicism that Evelyn Waugh has been accused of?
>What?
>I pause for a reply.
>
>

>On Aug 29, 10:07Â pm, Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and
> > sustain personal relationships with his
> literary peers, crossing people left
> > and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't
> > help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist
> > universalism.
> >
> > The man deserves more pity than engagement.
> >
> >
> >
> > On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

> > > Â naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our time. a bend in the


> > > river evokes every negative stereotype
> about africans imaginable; his cover?
> > > 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was
> > > regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> > > uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> > > naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward
> > > africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> > > ken harrow
> >
> > > At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
> >
> > > ----- Forwarded Message ----
> > > *From:* Errol Harry <errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> > > *Sent:* Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> > > *Subject:* Naipaul's latest book on Africa
> >
> > > *The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review*
> >
> > > *Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing

> Nobel Prize winner’s punishing
> > > quest to expose Africa̢۪s religious illusions *


>*
> >
> > > By Sameer Rahim
> > > Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
> >

> > > Â

> Comments<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>
> > > [image: The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul]
> > > The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
> >

> > > V S Naipaul̢۪s father was once forced to
> sacrificfice a goat to the Hindu


> > > goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was
> still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul
> > > had written an article in the *Trinidad Guardian* criticising Hindu
> > > farmers who ignored government regulations
> and inoculated their cattle with
> > > religious rites.
> >
> > > His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he
> > > appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing
> > > trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he

> > > offered up a severed goat̢۪s head on a brass platlate.
> >
> > > In that Sunday̢۪s paper he was all
> bluster: Ã: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No
>
> > > Poison last night†. But this “great
> eat humiliation†, as his son wrote in


> > > *Finding the Centre* (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk

> > > into depression. According to Naipaul̢۪s
> mother, r, “He looked in the mirror
>
> > > one day and couldn’t see himself. And he began tn to scream.â€


> >
> > > Over the course of his long writing career,

> V S °S Naipaul’s view of
>f


> > > religion has moved ­ much like this story ­

> from om thethe potentially comic to


> > > the outright sinister. His first published
> novel, *The Mystic Masseur *(1957),
> > > was a satire on a fake pundit. In his
> masterpiece *A House for Mr Biswas*(1961) the
> title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his
> > > training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his
> > > excrement. His travel book on India, *An Area of Darkness* (1964), took a
> > > harsher view of Hinduism and the caste
> system and after 1970, when he first

> > > learnt about his father̢۪s ritual
> humiliation (th(the family had kept it an


> > > absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.
> >
> > > *Among the Believers* (1981) and *Beyond Belief* (1998) blamed the
> > > problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam.
> > > Third World peoples who refused to abandon
> their ancestral illusions for the
> > > civilised and secular values of the West ­

> as Naipaul has so ccconspicuously


> > > done ­ are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.
> >
> > > Now he has travelled to six countries ­

> Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria,, the Ivory
> > > Coast, Gabon and South Africa ­ to discover the â€â‚¬œœnature of African
> > > belief†. *The Masque of Africa* starts in Kampala, the ccapital of


> > > Uganda, where Naipaul immediately observes a conflict between the native

> > > religion, offering “only the world of
> the spirits a and the ancestors†,


> > > and the foreign religions (Islam and Christianity) whose new places of

> > > worship on the city̢۪s hills are like
> ââ“an applied and contagious illness,


> > > curing nothing, giving no final answers…

> fighting wrong battless, narrowing
> > > the mind†. He doess not visit these
> mosques and churchess; a view from the


> > > foothills is enough.
> >
> > > When Naipaul does visit somewhere his observations can be acute. At the
> > > shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the
> 19th-century ruler who had dealings with
> > > John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a

> “sense of f wonder†. But nearby


> > > he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide

> > > assures him the boy is just playing. “I
> didnâ’t believe him,†Naipaul
>aul


> > > says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that
> nine men were sacrificed at the
> > > shrine during its construction.
> >
> > > For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the
> > > faithful, before widening his vision to
> examine what they chose not to see.
> >
> > > Naipaul has always been able to spot a
> fraud, and the best writing in this
> > > book deals with native healers and fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a
> > > small office and spots a framed certificate on the wall: the witch doctor

> > > has an official licence so that “no
> believer need f feel ashamed†. In


> > > Nigeria he teases a fortune-teller by asking whether or not his daughter
> > > will get married (Naipaul has no children). The man replies that she is
> > > cursed and that only a fee will release

> her. “But w what he’s told me is
>s
> > > good,†says a straight-faced Naipaul.
> â€Å‚¬Å“I don’t want the girl to get
>t
> > > married.â€


> >
> > > He shows a touching sympathy for animals: tormented kittens are a running
> > > theme, along with mistreated horses and
> hunted bush animals (the forest is

> > > “like a free supermarket, open to
> everyoneââ¢â‚¬ ). When he finds a house in


> > > Ghana with well-treated pets, he softens:

> “I began n to be prejudiced in
> > > favour of the house.â€


> >
> > > But mostly Naipaul comes across here as
> tired and tetchy, complaining about
> > > being overcharged by his guides and the bad

> hotels (â€ÅÅ“the broken safe, the
> > > dusty refrigerator†). From his car
> window he sees childrren walking home


> > > from school in Uganda and comments, in what seems like a parody of

> > > Naipaulian pessimism, that “education and school ununiforms, giving an


> > > illusion of possibility, was easy; much
> harder was the creation of a proper

> > > economy†. We learn that the
> “Nigeriaerian mindset … resisted rationalityâ€

> > > and that Chinese logging companies are motivated by a ‬œhatred of the
> > > earth†.


> >
> > > The one humorous moment in the book is marred by self-pity and a
> > > predictable dig at the locals. On the way to see some ancestral bones in

> > > Gabon, his “nervy, frail†legs give
> wve way and he falls to the ground. His
> > > guide brings a wheelbarrow. “But it was
> an African n job, heavily rusted,


> > > and not sturdy, sagging below my weight
> when, leaning back far too much, I

> > > tried unsuccessfully to sit in it.â€


> >
> > > It is puzzling why Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul, at the age of 78,
> > > continues to punish himself with such
> travels. Perhaps, like his father, he
> > > is worried about what he sees when he looks
> in the mirror. Is he the Nobel
> > > Prize-winning sage who has written 30
> acclaimed books over 50 years? Or is
> > > he a fraud, pretending to be a country
> gentleman in Wiltshire when his true
> > > home is among the wretched of the earth? He has seen through superstition
> > > and religion; he has exposed political
> idealism and racial nationalism. But
> > > his scepticism is so entrenched that his work is now cleansed of humour,
> > > imagination and human sympathy.
> >
> > > The final line of *The Masque of Africa* claims that in post-apartheid

> > > South Africa “a resolution is not really
> possible u until the people who


> > > wish to impose themselves on Africa violate some essential part of their

> > > being†. Naipaul’s imposing
> achievchievement has violated an essential part of


> > > his being. There is something deeply sad
> about watching him in the African
> > > forest, a wounded animal, looking for a
> final vindication of his own painful
> > > journey.

> > > Â The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African

> Belief<http://books.telegraph.co.uk/BerteShopWeb/viewProduct.do?ISBN=9780330...>by
> V S Naipaul
> >
> > > --
> > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa
> > > Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola,
> University of Texas at Austin.
> > > For current archives, visit
> > >http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
> > > For previous archives, visit
> > >http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
> > > To post to this group, send an email to
> USAAfric...@googlegroups.com
> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
> > > unsub...@googlegroups.com
> >

> > > Â Kenneth W. Harrow

kenneth harrow

unread,
Aug 30, 2010, 10:43:56 AM8/30/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com
i need to simplify in responding here, to both friends cornelius and ikhide:
the problem is not that naipaul mounted
criticisms of africa or africans. but that all he
sees of africa and africans is evil. perhaps we
can say that there were real flaws in black
culture after the american civil war, and that
depicting the legislatures in the south as
dysfunctional was an accepted critique. but if
all one sees are subhumans in those who represent
the flaws, one is generating racist stereotypes,
not simply critiquing. there has to be a
difference between the two, between a critique
generated from the perspective that those being
critiqued are still human like all humans, and
another that evokes their animality and evil
natures as those of inferior beings, as meriting
being spit upon, as those whose vaginas merit
being spit upon....naipaul's scene, not mine, in bend in the river.
if naipaul is not a racist, maybe griffith's
birth of a nation isn't, and the greatest emblems
of racism are merely humorous criticisms.
maybe not.
tell me how to read someone who consistently
represents dark skinned people as inferior, if not as a racist.
ken


At 08:40 AM 8/30/2010, you wrote:

>I have not yet read Naipaul's latest but from the comments on this
>page and the Guardian's review, my expectations are great:
>
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-africa-review
>

> Jonathan Franzen may write with the principle in mind, that “The
>reader is a friend, not an adversary, not a spectator.†- and perhaps


>this is also Naipual's operative approach, since we can tell by his
>book sales that he does have a very large and appreciative readership.
>Is it safe to conclude then that he panders to the appetite and
>expectations of his faithful fans/readers who want some more of the
>same or must we credit him with being absolutely faithful to his own
>experience, his own perceptions, like the true literary artist and
>essayist he is?
>
>Or is there no such thing?
>
>I remember in 2001, when it was announced that V.S. had been awarded
>the Nobel Prize in Literature. I called up two friends, one a great
>intellectual from Guadeloupe and the other from Jamaica, to
>congratulate them They both said exactly the same thing, one

>word:†Collie-man†, which is a Carribean's derogatory description of an


>Indian. Naipaul had already pissed them off.
>
>In as far as biographical heresy can be applied to throw light on Mr.

>Naipaul's literary output, Paul Theroux's “Sir Vidia's Shadow†has


>given the most unkindest cut of all.
>

>Paul Theroux should know. Had Sir Vidia written his ( Theroux's) “

>Fong and the Indians†someone would have seen racism in the depiction


>of Africans in that novel and perhaps cried, where I laughed at what I
>thought was funny
>

>Whether it is with V.S.'s “An Area of Darkness†- written about his
>visit to his ancestral India, or his post-Salman Rushdie “Among the
>Believers†about Islam and Islamists or the much referred to and in my

>opinion innocuous “ A Bend in The River†one of Naipaul's functions


>then is to prick us to some critical self-examination as Lord Ikhide
>has just done. And for that should Naipaul - or his brother Shiva

>Naipaul ( North of South†) be blighted?


>
>Professor Harrow sounds remarkably like my dear Dr. Valentine Ojo when
>he says what he says about V..S: Naipaul.
>
>Perhaps, if Naipual had been Black instead of Brown, African, instead
>of an Indian British Lord examining other cultures from the
>perspective of a higher (the standards of Western Civilisation), and
>seeing Africa and India through the lens of his higher culture, we
>would not be accusing him of racism.
>

>What then would we be accusing him ­ on the basis of his written woord?


>Arrogance?
>The sort of cynicism that Evelyn Waugh has been accused of?
>What?
>I pause for a reply.
>
>

>On Aug 29, 10:07Â pm, Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and
> > sustain personal relationships with his
> literary peers, crossing people left
> > and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't
> > help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist
> > universalism.
> >
> > The man deserves more pity than engagement.
> >
> >
> >
> > On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

> > > Â naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our time. a bend in the


> > > river evokes every negative stereotype
> about africans imaginable; his cover?
> > > 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was
> > > regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> > > uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> > > naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward
> > > africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> > > ken harrow
> >
> > > At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
> >
> > > ----- Forwarded Message ----
> > > *From:* Errol Harry <errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> > > *Sent:* Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> > > *Subject:* Naipaul's latest book on Africa
> >
> > > *The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review*
> >
> > > *Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing

> Nobel Prize winner’s punishing
> > > quest to expose Africa̢۪s religious illusions *

>*
> >
> > > By Sameer Rahim
> > > Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
> >

> > > Â

> Comments<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>
> > > [image: The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul]
> > > The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
> >

> > > V S Naipaul̢۪s father was once forced to
> sacrificfice a goat to the Hindu


> > > goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was
> still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul
> > > had written an article in the *Trinidad Guardian* criticising Hindu
> > > farmers who ignored government regulations
> and inoculated their cattle with
> > > religious rites.
> >
> > > His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he
> > > appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing
> > > trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he

> > > offered up a severed goat̢۪s head on a brass platlate.
> >
> > > In that Sunday̢۪s paper he was all
> bluster: Ã: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No
>
> > > Poison last night†. But this “great

> eat humiliation†, as his son wrote in


> > > *Finding the Centre* (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk

> > > into depression. According to Naipaul̢۪s

> mother, r, “He looked in the mirror
>
> > > one day and couldn’t see himself. And he began tn to scream.â€


> >
> > > Over the course of his long writing career,

> V S °S Naipaul’s view of
>f

> > > religion has moved ­ much like this story ­

> from om thethe potentially comic to


> > > the outright sinister. His first published
> novel, *The Mystic Masseur *(1957),
> > > was a satire on a fake pundit. In his
> masterpiece *A House for Mr Biswas*(1961) the
> title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his
> > > training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his
> > > excrement. His travel book on India, *An Area of Darkness* (1964), took a
> > > harsher view of Hinduism and the caste
> system and after 1970, when he first

> > > learnt about his father̢۪s ritual

> humiliation (th(the family had kept it an


> > > absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.
> >
> > > *Among the Believers* (1981) and *Beyond Belief* (1998) blamed the
> > > problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam.
> > > Third World peoples who refused to abandon
> their ancestral illusions for the
> > > civilised and secular values of the West ­

> as Naipaul has so ccconspicuously


> > > done ­ are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.
> >
> > > Now he has travelled to six countries ­

> Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria,, the Ivory
> > > Coast, Gabon and South Africa ­ to discover the â€â‚¬œœnature of African

> > > belief†. *The Masque of Africa* starts in Kampala, the ccapital of


> > > Uganda, where Naipaul immediately observes a conflict between the native

> > > religion, offering “only the world of
> the spirits a and the ancestors†,


> > > and the foreign religions (Islam and Christianity) whose new places of

> > > worship on the city̢۪s hills are like

> ââ“an applied and contagious illness,


> > > curing nothing, giving no final answers…

> fighting wrong battless, narrowing
> > > the mind†. He doess not visit these
> mosques and churchess; a view from the


> > > foothills is enough.
> >
> > > When Naipaul does visit somewhere his observations can be acute. At the
> > > shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the
> 19th-century ruler who had dealings with
> > > John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a

> “sense of f wonder†. But nearby


> > > he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide

> > > assures him the boy is just playing. “I
> didnâ’t believe him,†Naipaul
>aul

> > > says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that
> nine men were sacrificed at the
> > > shrine during its construction.
> >
> > > For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the
> > > faithful, before widening his vision to
> examine what they chose not to see.
> >
> > > Naipaul has always been able to spot a
> fraud, and the best writing in this
> > > book deals with native healers and fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a
> > > small office and spots a framed certificate on the wall: the witch doctor

> > > has an official licence so that “no

> believer need f feel ashamed†. In


> > > Nigeria he teases a fortune-teller by asking whether or not his daughter
> > > will get married (Naipaul has no children). The man replies that she is
> > > cursed and that only a fee will release

> her. “But w what he’s told me is
>s
> > > good,†says a straight-faced Naipaul.

> â€Å‚¬Å“I don’t want the girl to get
>t
> > > married.â€


> >
> > > He shows a touching sympathy for animals: tormented kittens are a running
> > > theme, along with mistreated horses and
> hunted bush animals (the forest is

> > > “like a free supermarket, open to
> everyoneââ¢â‚¬ ). When he finds a house in


> > > Ghana with well-treated pets, he softens:

> “I began n to be prejudiced in
> > > favour of the house.â€


> >
> > > But mostly Naipaul comes across here as
> tired and tetchy, complaining about
> > > being overcharged by his guides and the bad

> hotels (â€ÅÅ“the broken safe, the
> > > dusty refrigerator†). From his car
> window he sees childrren walking home


> > > from school in Uganda and comments, in what seems like a parody of

> > > Naipaulian pessimism, that “education and school ununiforms, giving an


> > > illusion of possibility, was easy; much
> harder was the creation of a proper

> > > economy†. We learn that the
> “Nigeriaerian mindset … resisted rationalityâ€

> > > and that Chinese logging companies are motivated by a ‬œhatred of the

> > > earth†.


> >
> > > The one humorous moment in the book is marred by self-pity and a
> > > predictable dig at the locals. On the way to see some ancestral bones in

> > > Gabon, his “nervy, frail†legs give

> wve way and he falls to the ground. His
> > > guide brings a wheelbarrow. “But it was
> an African n job, heavily rusted,


> > > and not sturdy, sagging below my weight
> when, leaning back far too much, I

> > > tried unsuccessfully to sit in it.â€


> >
> > > It is puzzling why Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul, at the age of 78,
> > > continues to punish himself with such
> travels. Perhaps, like his father, he
> > > is worried about what he sees when he looks
> in the mirror. Is he the Nobel
> > > Prize-winning sage who has written 30
> acclaimed books over 50 years? Or is
> > > he a fraud, pretending to be a country
> gentleman in Wiltshire when his true
> > > home is among the wretched of the earth? He has seen through superstition
> > > and religion; he has exposed political
> idealism and racial nationalism. But
> > > his scepticism is so entrenched that his work is now cleansed of humour,
> > > imagination and human sympathy.
> >
> > > The final line of *The Masque of Africa* claims that in post-apartheid

> > > South Africa “a resolution is not really
> possible u until the people who


> > > wish to impose themselves on Africa violate some essential part of their

> > > being†. Naipaul’s imposing

> achievchievement has violated an essential part of


> > > his being. There is something deeply sad
> about watching him in the African
> > > forest, a wounded animal, looking for a
> final vindication of his own painful
> > > journey.

> > > Â The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African

> Belief<http://books.telegraph.co.uk/BerteShopWeb/viewProduct.do?ISBN=9780330...>by
> V S Naipaul
> >
> > > --
> > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa
> > > Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola,
> University of Texas at Austin.
> > > For current archives, visit
> > >http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
> > > For previous archives, visit
> > >http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
> > > To post to this group, send an email to
> USAAfric...@googlegroups.com
> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
> > > unsub...@googlegroups.com
> >

> > > Â Kenneth W. Harrow

Cornelius Hamelberg

unread,
Aug 31, 2010, 6:37:27 AM8/31/10
to USA Africa Dialogue Series
Professor Harrow & Co,

I'm seeking some more direction from you.

At this very moment I'm strangely reminded of Ulli Beier of whom I
heard an anthropologist joke that he was he was leaving Nigeria for
Papua New Guinea, which he described as “ another area of darkness”

Some people see, have seen Naipaul and Rushdie as the Wild West's
literary attack dogs who in fiction and non-fiction peer into our
backwardness, to wage war on cherished religious and cultural values
and the life lived outside of the pale of Western Civilisation, the
Western Civilisation of which when asked, Mahatma Gandhi said “I
think it would be a good idea.”

I erroneously referred to “Among the Believers” as post -Salman
Rushdie, because it has been around for so long; perhaps it even paved
the way for “ The Satanic Verses” and enjoyed even greater popularity
after Rushdie's controversial novel.

We all agree that V.S. Naipaul is an engaging writer, perhaps a great
writer, one that we do not neglect and some of us seem to be forced to
read, just because he visits some of our natural habitats. Is that not
so?

The Nobel Prize committee awarded Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul
the Nobel Prize in Literature for largesse of spirit, not for for
being a racist or for being “one of the great racist writers of our
time “ but "for having united perceptive narrative and incorruptible
scrutiny in works that compel us to see the presence of suppressed
histories".

http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul.html

After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.

Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
Islamic Excursions among the Converted Peoples”?

I got a copy of his “ Half a life” from his Swedish literary agent for
Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and may have a
soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
That's women for you, can have a soft spot for every kind of
scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.

But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have
their heads examined ? Do they see the “racism” that you see in the
unrepentant Naipaul – or do you think that conscious as he is, he is
simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding such prizes to
writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
posthumously?

http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=Nobel+Prize+%3A+Naipaul
> >http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-afri...
> ...
>
> read more »- Hide quoted text -

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Aug 31, 2010, 11:16:44 AM8/31/10
to USA Africa Dialogue Series

Emeagwali, Gloria (History)

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Aug 31, 2010, 3:05:06 PM8/31/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com

 

Note also that Naipaul’s work directly and indirectly reflects aspects of the excruciating  racial tension

within Trinidad and Tobago.    

Gloria Emeagwali

 

 

 

From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafric...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Moses Ebe Ochonu
Sent: Sunday, August 29, 2010 4:08 PM
To: usaafric...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Naipaul's Latest Book on 'The Masque of Africa: Glimpse of African Belief'

 

Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and sustain personal relationships with his literary peers, crossing people left and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist universalism.



The man deserves more pity than engagement.

On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

naipaul is one of the great racist writers of our time. a bend in the river evokes every negative stereotype about africans imaginable; his cover? 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized. uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward africa, and the rest of the third world. really
ken harrow







At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Errol Harry <errolh...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
Subject: Naipaul's latest book on Africa

The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review



Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing Nobel Prize winner’s punishing quest to expose Africa’s religious illusions



 

By Sameer Rahim
Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010

Comments

Error! Filename not specified. 

kenneth harrow

unread,
Aug 31, 2010, 9:44:42 PM8/31/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com
dear cornelius
i do not have time for deep reflections now as 2
course preps for tomorrow are still to be undertaken.
first, i read the early, trinidad novels of
naipaul, and then on to bend in the river, among
the unbelievers. after that i pretty much stopped.
i will rely on your reflections to answer the
question i posed: what would a racist author look
like? i am not really interested in obtaining the
answer from the nobel committee, but rather from
the engaged scholars here on this list, and other
experts in naipaul. you know his work much more than i do. enlighten us.

he wrote of 3d world intellectuals as attempting
to become civilized by imitating the real thing,
english intellectuals who were not afraid to
assert the primacy of their venerable
civilization. he bought the crap lock stock and
barrel, and those who were not up to the task
were mere mimic men. africa then became the site
for the feebleness of imitation, the failed
assimilation policies of the colonizers who never
really meant it, and of a barbarism closer to
conrad's imagery than say achebe's. there is no
humanity in the naipaul africans; the indians of
africa were cynics out for a buck, making their
way through the savages; naipaul opened a cynical
eye onto the political scene, and that was enough
for the superior tastes of europeans who don't
know a thing about actual african people to be wowed by him.
there was nothing left; no love, no beauty, no
humanity, no possibility except to follow his own
path to the hallowed halls of oxford, or was it cambridge.
he was interviewed by an ayatollah in Among the
Believers, and asked where he came from. he
stated, the islands. but, he tells the reader,
the real answer would have been england, oxford,
the real home for an intellectual like himself.
the islands were long since left behind.
i could have continued reading his entertaining
books, but my time was limited. was i to spend
the valuable time on him, or on soyinka's latest,
on the newest nigerian stars, on the latest
senegalese film? stories of naipaul's horrific
views of black people continued to be circulated,
comments that a colleague from the netherlands
relayed to me, confirming the worst impressions
of racist beliefs. i do not have time to devote
to him while i still have an unread assia djebar
novel to read. i commend djebar to us all; she is
beauty itself; he is the opposite
ken


At 06:37 AM 8/31/2010, you wrote:
>Professor Harrow & Co,
>
>I'm seeking some more direction from you.
>
>At this very moment I'm strangely reminded of Ulli Beier of whom I
>heard an anthropologist joke that he was he was leaving Nigeria for

>Papua New Guinea, which he described as “ another area of darknessâ€

>
>Some people see, have seen Naipaul and Rushdie as the Wild West's
>literary attack dogs who in fiction and non-fiction peer into our
>backwardness, to wage war on cherished religious and cultural values
>and the life lived outside of the pale of Western Civilisation, the

>Western Civilisation of which when asked, Mahatma Gandhi said “I
>think it would be a good idea.â€
>
>I erroneously referred to “Among the Believers†as post -Salman


>Rushdie, because it has been around for so long; perhaps it even paved

>the way for “ The Satanic Verses†and enjoyed even greater popularity


>after Rushdie's controversial novel.
>
>We all agree that V.S. Naipaul is an engaging writer, perhaps a great
>writer, one that we do not neglect and some of us seem to be forced to
>read, just because he visits some of our natural habitats. Is that not
>so?
>
>The Nobel Prize committee awarded Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul
>the Nobel Prize in Literature for largesse of spirit, not for for

>being a racist or for being “one of the great racist writers of our
>time “ but "for having united perceptive narrative and incorruptible


>scrutiny in works that compel us to see the presence of suppressed
>histories".
>
>http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul.html
>
>After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
>encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
>lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
>intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.
>

>Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
>Islamic Excursions among the Converted Peoples†?
>
>I got a copy of his “ Half a life†from his Swedish literary agent for


>Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and may have a
>soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
>That's women for you, can have a soft spot for every kind of
>scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.
>
> But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have

>their heads examined ? Do they see the “racism†that you see in the


>unrepentant Naipaul ­ or do you think that conscious as he is, he is
>simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
>and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding such prizes to
>writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
>posthumously?
>
>http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=Nobel+Prize+%3A+Naipaul
>
>
>
>
>On Aug 30, 4:43Â pm, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
> > i need to simplify in responding here, to
> both friends cornelius and ikhide:
> > the problem is not that naipaul mounted
> > criticisms of africa or africans. but that all he
> > sees of africa and africans is evil. perhaps we
> > can say that there were real flaws in black
> > culture after the american civil war, and that
> > depicting the legislatures in the south as

> > dysfunctional was an accepted critique. but  if


> > all one sees are subhumans in those who represent
> > the flaws, one is generating racist stereotypes,
> > not simply critiquing. there has to be a
> > difference between the two, between a critique
> > generated from the perspective that those being
> > critiqued are still human like all humans, and
> > another that evokes their animality and evil
> > natures as those of inferior beings, as meriting
> > being spit upon, as those whose vaginas merit
> > being spit upon....naipaul's scene, not mine, in bend in the river.
> > if naipaul is not a racist, maybe griffith's
> > birth of a nation isn't, and the greatest emblems
> > of racism are merely humorous criticisms.
> > maybe not.
> > tell me how to read someone who consistently
> > represents dark skinned people as inferior, if not as a racist.
> > ken
> >
> > At 08:40 AM 8/30/2010, you wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > >I have not yet read Naipaul's latest but from the comments on this
> > >page and the Guardian's review, my expectations are great:
> >
> > >http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-afri...
> >

> > >  Jonathan Franzen may write with the principle in mind, that “The
>
> > >reader is a friend, not an adversary, not a spectator.† - and perhaps
> > >this is also Naipual's operative approach, since  we can tell by his


> > >book sales that he does have a very large and appreciative readership.
> > >Is it safe to conclude then that he panders to the appetite and
> > >expectations of his faithful fans/readers who want some more of the
> > >same or must we credit him with being absolutely faithful to his own
> > >experience, his own perceptions, like the true literary artist and
> > >essayist he is?
> >
> > >Or is there no such thing?
> >
> > >I remember in 2001, when it was announced that V.S. had been awarded
> > >the Nobel Prize in Literature. I called up two friends, one a great
> > >intellectual from Guadeloupe and the other from Jamaica, to

> > >congratulate them  They both said exactly  the same thing, one
> > >word:†Collie-man†, which is a
> Carribean's 's derogatory description of an


> > >Indian. Naipaul had already pissed them off.
> >
> > >In as far as biographical heresy can be applied to throw light on Mr.
> > >Naipaul's literary output, Paul Theroux's

> “Sir Vidiaia's Shadow† has


> > >given the most unkindest cut of all.
> >

> > >Paul Theroux should know. Had Sir Vidia written his ( Theroux's) “
>
> > >Fong and the Indians† someone would have seen racismm in the depiction


> > >of Africans in that novel and perhaps cried, where I laughed at what I
> > >thought was funny
> >

> > >Whether it is with V.S.'s “An Area of
> Darkness↠- written about his
> > >visit to his ancestral India, or his post-Salman Rushdie  â€œAmong the
> > >Believers†about Islam and Islamists or the much referred to and in my
> > >opinion innocuous “ A Bend in The
> Riverââ‚€  one of  Naipaul's functions
> > >then is to prick us to some critical self-examination as  Lord Ikhide
> > >has just done. And for that should Naipaul  - or his brother Shiva
> > >Naipaul ( North of South†) be blighted?


> >
> > >Professor Harrow sounds remarkably like my dear Dr. Valentine Ojo when
> > >he says what he says about V..S: Naipaul.
> >
> > >Perhaps, if Naipual had been Black instead of Brown, African, instead
> > >of an Indian British Lord examining other cultures from the

> > >perspective of a higher (the standards of  Western Civilisation), and


> > >seeing Africa and India through the lens of his higher culture, we
> > >would not be accusing him of racism.
> >

> > >What then would we be accusing him ­ on the basis of his written woord?


> > >Arrogance?
> > >The sort of cynicism that Evelyn Waugh has been accused of?
> > >What?
> > >I pause for a reply.
> >

> > >On Aug 29, 10:07Â pm, Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause.
> The man cannot even cultivate and
> > > > sustain personal relationships with his
> > > literary peers, crossing people left
> > > > and right and telling them to "take it in
> the cheek like a man." He can't
> > > > help himself in his role as a "Third
> World" advocate of Eucentric, racist
> > > > universalism.
> >
> > > > The man deserves more pity than engagement.
> >
> > > > On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth
> harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

> > > > > Â naipaul is one of the great racist

> writers of our time. a bend in the
> > > > > river evokes every negative stereotype
> > > about africans imaginable; his cover?
> > > > > 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's
> reign, and before it, lumumba's, was
> > > > > regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> > > > > uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> > > > > naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam
> british snobbism and racism toward
> > > > > africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> > > > > ken harrow
> >
> > > > > At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
> >
> > > > > ----- Forwarded Message ----
> > > > > *From:* Errol Harry <errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> > > > > *Sent:* Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> > > > > *Subject:* Naipaul's latest book on Africa
> >
> > > > > *The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review*
> >
> > > > > *Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing

> > > Nobel Prize winner’s punishing
>g
> > > > > quest to expose Africa’s religious illillusions *


> > >*
> >
> > > > > By Sameer Rahim
> > > > > Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
> >

> > > > > Â


> > >
> Comments<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>
> > > > > [image: The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul]
> > > > > The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
> >

> > > > > V S Naipaul’s father was once forced td to


> > > sacrificfice a goat to the Hindu
> > > > > goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was
> > > still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul
> > > > > had written an article in the *Trinidad Guardian* criticising Hindu
> > > > > farmers who ignored government regulations
> > > and inoculated their cattle with
> > > > > religious rites.
> >
> > > > > His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he
> > > > > appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing
> > > > > trousers rather than the traditional
> loincloth (his small rebellion), he

> > > > > offered up a severed goat’s head on a a brass platlate.
> >
> > > > > In that Sunday’s paper he was all
>l
> > > bluster: Ã: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No
>
> >
> > > > > Poison last night†. But this â“great
> > > eat humiliation†, as his son wrote in


> > > > > *Finding the Centre* (1984), destroyed
> his life. He lost his job and sunk

> > > > > into depression. According to Naipaul’™s
> > > mother, r, “He looked in the mirror
>
> >
> > > > > one day and couldn’t see himself.
> And nd he began tn to scream.â€


> >
> > > > > Over the course of his long writing career,

> > > V S °S Naipaulâ€Â¢â‚¬™s view of
> > >f
> > > > > religion has moved ­ much like this story ­


> > > from om thethe potentially comic to
> > > > > the outright sinister. His first published
> > > novel, *The Mystic Masseur *(1957),
> > > > > was a satire on a fake pundit. In his
> > > masterpiece *A House for Mr Biswas*(1961) the
> > > title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his
> > > > > training as a Hindu priest when he
> pollutes some sacred flowers with his
> > > > > excrement. His travel book on India,
> *An Area of Darkness* (1964), took a
> > > > > harsher view of Hinduism and the caste
> > > system and after 1970, when he first

> > > > > learnt about his father’s ritual
>l


> > > humiliation (th(the family had kept it an
> > > > > absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.
> >
> > > > > *Among the Believers* (1981) and *Beyond Belief* (1998) blamed the
> > > > > problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia
> and Pakistan exclusively on Islam.
> > > > > Third World peoples who refused to abandon
> > > their ancestral illusions for the

> > > > > civilised and secular values of the West ­


> > > as Naipaul has so ccconspicuously

> > > > > done ­ are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.
> >
> > > > > Now he has travelled to six countries ­


> > > Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria,, the Ivory

> > > > > Coast, Gabon and South Africa ­ to
> discover the â€Ã¢‚¬œœnature of African
>can
> > > > > belief†. *The Masque of Africa*
> starts in Kamppala, the ccapital of


> > > > > Uganda, where Naipaul immediately
> observes a conflict between the native

> > > > > religion, offering “only the world of
>
> > > the spirits a and the ancestors†,


> > > > > and the foreign religions (Islam and
> Christianity) whose new places of

> > > > > worship on the city’s hills are like
>e
> > > ââ“an applied andnd contagious illness,


> > > > > curing nothing, giving no final answers…
> > > fighting wrong battless, narrowing

> > > > > the mind†. He doess not visit these


> > > mosques and churchess; a view from the
> > > > > foothills is enough.
> >
> > > > > When Naipaul does visit somewhere his
> observations can be acute. At the
> > > > > shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the
> > > 19th-century ruler who had dealings with
> > > > > John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a

> > > “sense of f wonder†. But But nearby


> > > > > he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide

> > > > > assures him the boy is just playing. “I
>
> > > didnâ’t believe him,ÆNaipaul


> > >aul
> > > > > says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that
> > > nine men were sacrificed at the
> > > > > shrine during its construction.
> >
> > > > > For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the
> > > > > faithful, before widening his vision to
> > > examine what they chose not to see.
> >
> > > > > Naipaul has always been able to spot a
> > > fraud, and the best writing in this
> > > > > book deals with native healers and
> fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a
> > > > > small office and spots a framed
> certificate on the wall: the witch doctor

> > > > > has an official licence so that “no


>
> > > believer need f feel
> >
> > ...
> >

> > read more »- Hide quoted text -


> >
> > - Show quoted text -
>

Pius Adesanmi

unread,
Sep 1, 2010, 9:42:56 AM9/1/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com
Ogbuefi Cornelius:

You are a total "a mo ran bi ni Oyo - asking rhetorical questions bordering on provocation like an Oyo man. You know the answer to the questions you are wahala-ing Ken about. And you are making Naipaul's racism, the worst kept secret in the literary world, sound like something that Ken alone has noticed ("Do they see this racism that you see..."!). Naipaul's racism is not Ken's making. Unlike Ken sha, I have never stopped reading Naipaul because one must keep the enemy close. Anyone who has been reading Naipaul should know that his skin-headism is irredeemable. I wonder why you lumped him with Rushdie? The Satanic Verses is not Naipaulian. Now to your questions:

 But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have their heads examined ? YES, for giving the prize to Naipaul.

 Do they see the racism that you see in the unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is simply unaware of it ? No, the Nobel Committee did not see Naipaul's racism car il n'y a de pire aveugle que celui qui ne veut pas voir. Naipaul is aware of his racism.

Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize? YES


and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding such prizes to
writers such as Sir Vidia? NO, but you can do natting about it. A lion's liver is vain wish for dogs.

 or should the prize be withdrawn now or even posthumously? YES

Pius




--- On Wed, 1/9/10, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

From: kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Naipaul's Latest Book on 'The Masque of Africa: Glimpse of African Belief'

kenneth harrow

unread,
Sep 1, 2010, 12:09:38 PM9/1/10
to usaafric...@googlegroups.com
dear cornelius
what country did you say you were living in?
i am still waiting for the brilliant nobel committee to explain to me why a nobody like golding gets the nobel while africa's great writers have not: where is achebe on the list of nobelists? why was borges not awarded? i would put 10 african authors ahead of golding in a flash, starting with the likes of farah, ngugi, even okri, compared with le clezio; and without a shadow of a doubt assia djebar.
explain that to me: golding over djebar????
it is pretty obvious to me that the 3d world gets leftovers, as the man said.
i am not sure what i would say in response to the question, why do we still care? was sartre right in saying no to the prize?
ken


At 09:42 AM 9/1/2010, you wrote:
Ogbuefi Cornelius:

You are a total "a mo ran bi ni Oyo - asking rhetorical questions bordering on provocation like an Oyo man. You know the answer to the questions you are wahala-ing Ken about. And you are making Naipaul's racism, the worst kept secret in the literary world, sound like something that Ken alone has noticed ("Do they see this racism that you see..."!). Naipaul's racism is not Ken's making. Unlike Ken sha, I have never stopped reading Naipaul because one must keep the enemy close. Anyone who has been reading Naipaul should know that his skin-headism is irredeemable. I wonder why you lumped him with Rushdie? The Satanic Verses is not Naipaulian. Now to your questions:

 But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have their heads examined ? YES, for giving the prize to Naipaul.

 Do they see the racism that you see in the unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is simply unaware of it ? No, the Nobel Committee did not see Naipaul's racism car il n'y a de pire aveugle que celui qui ne veut pas voir. Naipaul is aware of his racism.


Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize? YES

and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding such prizes to
writers such as Sir Vidia? NO, but you can do natting about it. A lion's liver is vain wish for dogs.

 or should the prize be withdrawn now or even posthumously? YES

Pius




--- On Wed, 1/9/10, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:

From: kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Naipaul's Latest Book on 'The Masque of Africa: Glimpse of African Belief'
Date: Wednesday, 1 September, 2010, 2:44

dear cornelius
i do not have time for deep reflections now as 2 course preps for tomorrow are still to be undertaken.
first, i read the early, trinidad novels of naipaul, and then on to bend in the river, among the unbelievers. after that i pretty much stopped.
i will rely on your reflections to answer the question i posed: what would a racist author look like? i am not really interested in obtaining the answer from the nobel committee, but rather from the engaged scholars here on this list, and other experts in naipaul. you know his work much more than i do. enlighten us.

he wrote of 3d world intellectuals as attempting to become civilized by imitating the real thing, english intellectuals who were not afraid to assert the primacy of their venerable civilization. he bought the crap lock stock and barrel, and those who were not up to the task were mere mimic men. africa then became the site for the feebleness of imitation, the failed assimilation policies of the colonizers who never really meant it, and of a barbarism closer to conrad's imagery than say achebe's. there is no humanity in the naipaul africans; the indians of africa were cynics out for a buck, making their way through the savages; naipaul opened a cynical eye onto the political scene, and that was enough for the superior tastes of europeans who don't know a thing about actual african people to be wowed by him.
there was nothing left; no love, no beauty, no humanity, no possibility except to follow his own path to the hallowed halls of oxford, or was it cambridge.
he was interviewed by an ayatollah in Among the Believers, and asked where he came from. he stated, the islands. but, he tells the reader, the real answer would have been england, oxford, the real home for an intellectual like himself. the islands were long since left behind.
i could have continued reading his entertaining books, but my time was limited. was i to spend the valuable time on him, or on soyinka's latest, on the newest nigerian stars, on the latest senegalese film? stories of naipaul's horrific views of black people continued to be circulated, comments that a colleague from the netherlands relayed to me, confirming the worst impressions of racist beliefs. i do not have time to devote to him while i still have an unread assia djebar novel to read. i commend djebar to us all; she is beauty itself; he is the opposite
ken


At 06:37 AM 8/31/2010, you wrote:
> Professor Harrow & Co,
>
> I'm seeking some more direction from you.
>
> At this very moment I'm strangely reminded of Ulli Beier of whom I
> heard an anthropologist joke that he was he was leaving Nigeria for
> Papua New Guinea, which he described as “ another area of darknessâ€
> Some people see, have seen Naipaul and Rushdie as the Wild West's
> literary attack dogs who in fiction and non-fiction peer into our
> backwardness, to wage war on cherished religious and cultural values
> and the life lived outside of  the pale of Western Civilisation, the
> Western Civilisation of which  when asked, Mahatma Gandhi said “I
> think it would be a good idea.ââ€
> I erroneously referred to “Among the the Believers† as post -Salman
> Rushdie, because itt has been around for so long; perhaps it even paved
> the way for “ The Satanic Verses† and enjoenjoyed even greater popularity
> after Rushdie's controversial novel.
>
> We all agree that V.S. Naipaul is an engaging writer, perhaps a great
> writer, one that we do not neglect and some of us seem to be forced to
> read, just because he visits some of our natural habitats. Is that not
> so?
>
> The Nobel Prize committee awarded Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul
> the Nobel Prize in Literature for largesse of spirit, not  for for
> being a racist or for being “one of the great racist writers of our
> t time “ but  "for having united perceptive narrativeve and incorruptible
> scrutiny in works that compel us to see the presence of suppressed
> After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
> encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
> lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
> intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.
>
> Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
> Islamic Excursionons among the Converted Peoples†?
>
> I got a coppy of his “ Half a life† from his Sws Swedish literary agent for
> Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and  may have a
> soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
> That's women for you, can have a  soft spot for every kind of
> scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.
>
>  But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have
> their heads examined ? Do they see the “racism† that yot you see in the
> unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is
> simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
> and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding  such prizes to
> writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
> On Aug 30, 4:43Â pm, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
> > i need to simplify in responding here, to both friends cornelius and ikhide:
> > the problem is not that naipaul mounted
> > criticisms of africa or africans. but that all he
> > sees of africa and africans is evil. perhaps we
> > can say that there were real flaws in black
> > culture after the american civil war, and that
> > depicting the legislatures in the south as
> > dysfunctional was an accepted critique. but  if
> > all one sees are subhumans in those who represent
> > the flaws, one is generating racist stereotypes,
> > not simply critiquing. there has to be a
> > difference between the two, between a critique
> > generated from the perspective that those being
> > critiqued are still human like all humans, and
> > another that evokes their animality and evil
> > natures as those of inferior beings, as meriting
> > being spit upon, as those whose vaginas merit
> > being spit upon....naipaul's scene, not mine, in bend in the river.
> > if naipaul is not a racist, maybe griffith's
> > birth of a nation isn't, and the greatest emblems
> > of racism are merely humorous criticisms.
> > maybe not.
> > tell me how to read someone who consistently
> > represents dark skinned people as inferior, if not as a racist.
> > ken
> >
> > At 08:40 AM 8/30/2010, you wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > >I have not yet read Naipaul's latest but from the comments on this
> > >page and the Guardian's review, my expectations are great:
> >
> > > http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-afri ...
> >
> > >  Jonathan Franzen may write with the principle in mind, that “The
>
> > >reader is a friend, not t an adversary, not a spectator.†  - and perhhaps
> > >this is also Naipual's operative approach, since  we can tell by his
> > >book sales that he does have a very large and appreciative readership.
> > >Is it safe to conclude then that he panders to the appetite and
> > >expectations of his faithful fans/readers who want some more of the
> > >same or must we credit him with being absolutely faithful to his own
> > >experience, his own perceptions, like the true literary artist and
> > >essayist he is?
> >
> > >Or is there no such thing?
> >
> > >I remember in 2001, when it was announced that V.S. had been awarded
> > >the Nobel Prize in Literature. I called up two friends, one a great
> > >intellectual from Guadeloupe and the other from Jamaica, to
> > >congratulate them  They both said exactly  the same thing, one
> > >word:†Colllie-man†, which is a Carribean's 's derogatory descripttion of an
> > >Indian. Naipaul had already pissed them off.
> >
> > >In as far as biographical heresy can be applied to throw light on Mr.
> > >Naipaul's literary output, Paul Theroux's “Sir Vidiaia's Shadow†€  has
> > >given the most unkindest cut of all.
> >
> > >Paul Theroux should know. Had Sir Vidia written his ( Theroux's) “
>
> > >Fong and ththe Indians† someone would have seen racismm in thhe depiction
> > >of Africans in that novel and perhaps cried, where I laughed at what I
> > >thought was funny
> >
> > >Whether it is with V.S.'s “An Area of Darknessâ¢Ã¢€   - written about his
> > >vissit to his ancestral India, or his post-Salman Rushdie  â€œAmong the
> > >Believers⢀ about Islam and Islamists or the much referred  to and in myy
> > >opinion innocuous “ A Bend in T The Riverââ‚€  one of Ãf  Naipaul's functions
> > >then is to prick us to some critical self-examination as  Lord Ikhide
> > >has just done. And for that should Naipaul  - or his brother Shiva
> > >Naipaul ( North of South†) be blighted?
> >> > >Professor Harrow sounds remarkably like my dear Dr. Valentine Ojo when
> > >he says what he says about V..S: Naipaul.
> >
> > >Perhaps, if Naipual had been Black instead of Brown, African, instead
> > >of an Indian British Lord examining other cultures from the
> > >perspective of a higher (the standards of  Western Civilisation), and
> > >seeing Africa and India through the lens of his higher culture, we
> > >would not be accusing him of racism.
> >
> > >What then would we be accusing him ­ on the basis of his written woord?
> > >Arrogance?
> > >The sort of cynicism that Evelyn Waugh has been accused of?
> > >What?
> > >I pause for a reply.
> >
> > >On Aug 29, 10:07Â pm, Moses Ebe Ochoonu <meoch...@gmail.com > wrote:
> > > > Naipaul is irredeemable, a lost cause. The man cannot even cultivate and
> > > > sustain personal relationships with his
> > > literary peers, crossing people left
> > > > and right and telling them to "take it in the cheek like a man." He can't
> > > > help himself in his role as a "Third World" advocate of Eucentric, racist
> > > > universalism.
> >
> > > > The man deserves more pity than engagement.
> >
> > > > On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 12:10 PM, kenneth harrow <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
> > > > > Â naipaul is one of the greeat racist writers of our time. a bend in the
> > > > > river evokes every negative stereotype
> > > about africans imaginable; his cover?
> > > > > 1. he is "third world" 2.mobuto's reign, and before it, lumumba's, was
> > > > > regarded by naipaul's kind of readers and editors as uncivilized.
> > > > > uncivilized means non-british, non-european, savage etc etc
> > > > > naipaul is the true exemplar of ox-cam british snobbism and racism toward
> > > > > africa, and the rest of the third world. really
> > > > > ken harrow
> >
> > > > > At 11:36 AM 8/29/2010, you wrote:
> >
> > > > > ----- Forwarded Message ----
> > > > > *From:* Errol Harry < errolharr...@yahoo.com>
> > > > > *Sent:* Sun, August 29, 2010 6:16:07 PM
> > > > > *Subject:* Naipaul's latest book on Africa
> >
> > > > > *The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul: review*
> >
> > > > > *Sameer Rahim is puzzled by the ageing
> > > Nobel Prize winner’s punishing
> g
> > > > quest to expose Africa’s religious illillusions *s *
> > >*
> >
> > > > > By Sameer Rahim
> > > > > Published: 5:19PM BST 27 Aug 2010
> > > > > [image: The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul]
> > > > > The Masque of Africa by V S Naipaul
> >
> > > > > V S Naipaul’s father was once forced td to
> > sacrificfice a goat to the Hindu
> > > > > goddess Kali. In June 1933, when Vidia was
> > > still a baby, Seepersad Naipaul
> > > > > had written an article in the *Trinidad Guardian* criticising Hindu
> > > > > farmers who ignored government regulations
> > > and inoculated their cattle with
> > > > > religious rites.
> >
> > > > > His angry opponents threatened him with a poisoning curse unless he
> > > > > appeased the goddess. He refused at first but soon relented: wearing
> > > > > trousers rather than the traditional loincloth (his small rebellion), he
> > > > > offered up a severed goat’s head on a  a brass platlate.
> >> > > > > In that Sunday‬™s paper he was all
> l
> > > bluster: ÃƒÆÆ’: “Mr Naipaul greets you! No

> >
> > > > > Poison last night†. But this âââ šÂ¬œgreat
> > > eat humiliation†, as his son wrote in
> > > > > *Finding thee Centre* (1984), destroyed his life. He lost his job and sunk
> > > > > into depression. According to Naipaulâ€â„„¢Ã¢„¢s
> > > mother, r, ¢€œHe looked in the mirror
>
> >
> ; > > > > one day and couldnâ€ââ„¢t see himself. And nd he began tn to scream.â€
> >
> > > > > Over the course of his llong writing career,
> > > Vâ€â‰S °S Naipaulâ€Ã‚¢¢Ã¢‚¬™s view of
> > >f
> > > > religion has moved ­ much like this story ­
> > > from om thethe potentially comic to
> > > > > the outright sinister. His first published
> > > novel, *The Mystic Masseur *(1957),
> > > > > was a satire on a fake pundit. In his
> > > masterpiece *A House for Mr Biswas*(1961) the
> > > title character (based on Seepersad) is expelled from his
> > > > > training as a Hindu priest when he pollutes some sacred flowers with his
> > > > > excrement. His travel book on India, *An Area of Darkness* (1964), took a
> > > > > harsher view of Hinduism and the caste
> > > system and after 1970, when he first
> > > > > learnt about his father’s ritual> l
> > > humiliation (th(the family had kept it an
> > > > > absolute secret), his work took on an unforgiving tone.
> >
> > > > > *Among the Believers* (1981) and *Beyond Belief* (1998) blamed the
> > > > > problems in Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia and Pakistan exclusively on Islam.
> > > > > Third World peoples who refused to abandon
> > > their ancestral illusions for the
> > > > > civilised and secular values of the West ­
> > > as Naipaul has so ccconspicuously
> > > > > done ­ are, he believes, condemned to backwardness.
> >
> > > > > Now he has travelled to six countries ­
> > > Uganda, Ghana, Nigeria,, the Ivory
> > > > > Coast, Gabon and South Africa ­ to discover the â€ÃƒÂ¢â€€šÃ‚¬œœnature of African
> can
> > > > > belief†. *The Masque of Africa* starts in Kamppala, the ccapital of
> > > > > Uganda, where Naipaul immediately observes a conflict between the native
> > > > > religion, offering “ononly the world of
>
> > > the spirits a and the ancestors†,
> > > > > and the forreign religions (Islam and Christianity) whose new places of
> > > > > worship on the city’s„¢s hills are like
> e
> > > ââ“an applied andnd contagious ilillness,
> > > > > curing nothing, giving no final answers…
> > > fighting wrong battless, narrowing
> >; > > > the mind†. He doess not viisit these
> > > mosques and churchess; a view from the
> > > > > foothills is enough.
> >
> > > > > When Naipaul does visit somewhere his observations can be acute. At the
> > > > > shrine of Mutesa I of Buganda, the
> > > 19th-century ruler who had dealings with
> > > > > John Speke and Henry Stanley, he feels a
> > > “sense of f wonderââ‚€ . But But nearby
> > > > > he notices a boy tormenting a small kitten; he protests but his guide
> > > > > assures him the boy is just playing. “I>
> > > didnâ’t believe him,ÃÂâ†Naipaul
> > >aul
> > > > > says. Back in the hotel, he discovers that
> > > nine men were sacrificed at the
> > > > > shrine during its construction.
> >
> > > > > For a brief moment he allowed himself to see through the eyes of the
> > > > > faithful, before widening his vision to
> > > examine what they chose not to see.
> >
> > > > > Naipaul has always been able to spot a
> > > fraud, and the best writing in this
> > > > > book deals with native healers and fortune-tellers. In Uganda he enters a
> > > > > small office and spots a framed certificate on the wall: the witch doctor
> > > > > has an official licence so that “no
> > > > believer need f feel
> >
> > ...
> >
> > read more »- Hide quoted text -

Chidi Anthony Opara

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Sep 2, 2010, 8:43:50 AM9/2/10
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What in Chukwu's name is responsible for our constant relapse into
Nobel mania? That Prize was not established to promote and support
cultural activism amongst Napaul's practitioners of "primitive"
cultures. I have always believed and have said it to whoever cares to
listen that the Nobel and other such prizes are used to promote
puppets of European imperialism. Achebe for instance, in my opinion,
does not need the Nobel or any of such Prizes. He has grown beyond
that.
> > <http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul....>http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul....
>
> > > After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
> > > encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
> > > lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
> > > intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.
>
> > > Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
> > > Islamic Excursionons among the Converted Peoples†?
>
> > > I got a coppy of his “ Half a
> > life† from his Sws Swedish literary agent for
> > > Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and  may have a
> > > soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
> > > That's women for you, can have a  soft spot for every kind of
> > > scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.
>
> > >  But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have
> > > their heads examined ? Do they see the
> > “racism† that yot you see in the
> > > unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is
> > > simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
> > > and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding  such prizes to
> > > writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
> > > posthumously?
>
> > <http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=No...>http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=No...
> ...
>
> read more »- Hide quoted text -

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Sep 2, 2010, 9:37:26 AM9/2/10
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Professor Harrow & Professor Adesanmi,

These are very serious matters that you raise and the very
credibility and hitherto good reputation of the Swedish Academy is at
stake because of their acts of omission and the literary felonies
that according to you have been committed by the selection committee.

I intend to convey your views to the Swedish Academy.

The Nobel Prize Committee seems to lay dormant between awarding Nobel
Prizes, don't say much and probably won't be saying much until the
next Noble Prize in Literature is announced, sometime next month. In
the meanwhile most of us will remain breathless and of course some of
us might even expire if it is not the grandfather of the African novel
or Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o this time.

Professor Harrow, if you remember in that thread in which you
expressed your disappointment after reading, the clichés and all
that's passé in Le Clezio's “Onitsha” I did mention that in spite
of outstanding favourites like USA's Philip Roth (and Israel's
controversial Amos Oz) the former Secretary of the Swedish Academy
Horace Engdahl has had some telling things to say about the state of
American Letters, and American Literature in general, and this has
probably poisoned the minds if not the the attitude of individual
members of the Selection Committee:

http://www.google.com/#hl=en&q=Horace+Engdahl+on+American+Literature&aq=&aqi=&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai=&pbx=1&fp=5673716d440c1f33

I wonder what he / they have to say about the corpus known as “African
Literature”?
Perhaps it is your sacred duty and the duty of critics like Chief
Abiola Irele and Chief Ikhide, to profile the Literature of Africa,
not only in learned journals, but also in the popular media, much more
than is being done today.

Chambi Chacage seems to fuse incidents from Naipauls life into the his
literary estimation of the man. We know for sure that Naipaul is he
is no William Faulkner. They are proud of him in India, that he is
from their loins, even though they do not like what he has to say
about the subcontinent, to the extent that not too long ago he was
required to present documentary evidence that his ancestors did indeed
hail from Mother India.

Of all the ill-willed things that you've observed about Sir Vidia so
far, especially when you mock his, “hallowed halls of oxford, or was
it cambridge.”, I must say in his Brahminical defence that some
thirty years ago it was reported in ( it must have been the telegraph
or perhaps the Times interview) in which he brayed about Holy Oxford
and I know that he is some sort of snob but it's still difficult to
believe or to even be able to explain his braying that “ Oxford is a
second class University “

If he says that about Oxford then what is he likely to say - if he
does decide to say) about Makerere or Nssuka ?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2001/sep/08/artsandhumanities.highereducation

I'm sure that the idea that Sir Vidia could be regarded as “the
foremost literary interpreter of the third world for a British and
American readership.” is from the pint of view of Professor Adesamni ,
a major criminal offence and only the punishment for such an offence
has not yet been determined.

Hi pious Pius, perhaps it's time for us to pass a holy fatwa on his
head?

What say you about such a proposition, in the name of Africa?
> > <http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul....>http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul....
>
> > > After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
> > > encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
> > > lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
> > > intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.
>
> > > Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
> > > Islamic Excursionons among the Converted Peoples†?
>
> > > I got a coppy of his “ Half a
> > life† from his Sws Swedish literary agent for
> > > Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and  may have a
> > > soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
> > > That's women for you, can have a  soft spot for every kind of
> > > scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.
>
> > >  But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have
> > > their heads examined ? Do they see the
> > “racism† that yot you see in the
> > > unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is
> > > simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
> > > and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding  such prizes to
> > > writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
> > > posthumously?
>
> > <http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=No...>http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=No...
> > 9/vs-naipaul-masque-of-afri>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/aug/29/vs-naipaul-masque-of-afri...
> > <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/7966020/The-Masque-of-Africa...>
> > <http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue>http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
> > >    For previous archives,
> > visit
> > <http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html>http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
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>
> >Kenneth W. Harrow
> >Distinguished Professor of English
> >Michigan State University
> >har...@msu.edu
> >517 803-8839
> >fax 517 353 3755
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Biko Agozino

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Sep 2, 2010, 1:05:19 PM9/2/10
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Bros,

Naipual's problem is primarily that of ingratitude which he probably inherited from his father. According to the literary theorist and former Principal of the St. Augustine campus of the University of the West Indies, Dr Bho Twarie, if Mr Biswas was a little more grateful to all the people who were trying to help him instead of constantly griping against them, he may have been a more successful person in life. The son is similarly dismissive of his debts to the Caribbean, to Oxford ('Oxford taught me nothing'), to his parents, wife, and partners, to India and to Africa. The lesson for younger writers is to learn the habit of gratitude and eschew the white-superiorism that might interfere with their writings because even good prose would not be enough to attract and retain significant readership when the personality and ideology and obnoxious and turn-offish.

Yet, we must not throw away the baby with the bath water. As a graduate student in Edinburgh University in the early 1990s, I received my first Naipaul book, India: A Million Mutinies Now, from my book club, Quality Paperback Series. However, before I could read the book, an English friend spoiled it for me by asking why I even bothered buying a Naipaul book given the man's well-known racism in the way he portrayed Indians and Africans as dirty and diseased and with no redeeming qualities. The comment discouraged me from reading the book but when I finally did ten years later before a trip to India, I learned quite a bit from the book.

For instance, Naipaul revealed in the book that when Gandhi went to live in South Africa after his law school in England, he was 'politically naive'. Now, I have never heard anyone describe the great Gandhi as being naive and so I read on. According to Naipaul, when Gandhi arrived in South Africa, he actually believed that colonialism was a good thing but the Zulus quickly reeducated him. Like many good writers, he did not go into detail about what lesson Gandhi learned from Zulus and so I had to go and find out for myself by reading 'Gandhi: the Autobiography'.

In that book, Gandhi himself agreed that he was a product of British education who believed that the white man was in Africa to bring civilization to the dark continent. He believed that the Zulus were lazy and that that was why they were always going on strike. He hoped that the British would teach them the ethics of hard work so that they could become a little more civilized like the Indian traders who had invited him to come and fight for them against discrimination by the British who lumped them together with the natives.

To Gandhi's surprise, the Zulu launched an uprising against the British and he quickly joined the British Army and was commissioned Sargent Major Gandhi. He was put in charge of a group of Indian volunteer nurses supporting the British army. Perhaps, Gandhi wished for some of the British officers to be wounded so that he and his fellow Indians would get an opportunity to treat them and thereby show the British that Indian nurses were every bit as effective as British ones and thereby persuade them that Indians should not be categorized at the same level with Africans.

But when all the wounded turned out to be Zulus, Gandhi was frustrated and started asking them why they were sitting there like sissies and taking the beating instead of fighting back like me. They laughed at him and told him that they were fighting back all right but that they were fighting back non-violently by refusing to pay taxes to a government that did not represent them and by refusing to work for employers who exploited them.

Naipul narrates how Gandhi took this lesson back to India and used it to change the national liberation strategy that was predominantly the militaristic strategy of mutinies which the British easily defeated through the war of manicures in the past. Now the Indians started using the non-violent strategy of refusing to buy salt when the prices were inflated (they made their own salt) and refusing to buy British cotton when the prices were hiked up (they wove their own loin clothes).

The nonviolent methods proved more effective in winning Indian independence and Kwame Nkrumah later adopted similar tactics (Positive Action) for the independence of Ghana but emphasized that it was an African strategy all right. The Civil Rights Movement adopted this African philosophy primarily but the Martin Luther King Jr Museum in Atlanta still mistakenly attributes it to Gandhi without adding that Gandhi himself attributed it to Africans. A graduate student from Howard university told me that the day after she heard me make this point at a recent Association of Black Sociologists meeting in Atlanta, she went to the museum and could not resist correcting a parent who was explaining to a child that MLK borrowed non-violence from Gandhi.

Other surprising lessons that I have learned from Naipul's India include the fact that the Black Panther Party influenced the lowest caste in India, The Dalith, to form the Dalith Panthers Party. He also explained that arranged marriages are more prestigeous in India than what they call 'love matches'. He has a fascinating chapter on a monthly magazine, Indian Woman, that is published by a man but that is very successful among women because of its ability to involve the readers in the interactive development of soap-opera-like themes. When I arrived New Delhi in 2004, the first thing I bought was a copy of Indian Woman and not surprisingly, it came with a free gift: a tampon! Some lesson in marketing.

I have since bought other Naipaul books but I must confess that I have never read any of them from cover to cover. Am I alone in finding his style a touch boring? This might have to do with the attitude of the author to his audience and since postmodernists have proclaimed the death of the author with the arrival of the reader who is free to interpret the work as he/she feels, I agree with those who have pointed out that when it comes down to a competition for my time, there are choice pieces of literature that I have prioritized over those of Naipaul. Yet, I will not deny that it is possible to learn something new even from an unusual Naipaul source. I have not read his new yabbis on Africa but I will not rule it out someday.

It is not enough to condemn his racism and snobbishness. We need to encourage more writers to dwell on the positive contributions that Africans have made and continue to make to world civilization even while critiquing the negative remnants of centuries of slavery, colonialism and post-colonialism in constructive ways that would help us to usher in a greater Africa, the Renascent Africa that Azikiwe announced in 1937 while cursing the 'Old Africa' for blocking progress.

Biko

--- On Thu, 9/2/10, Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:

Anunoby, Ogugua

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Sep 2, 2010, 1:54:26 PM9/2/10
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The Nobel Committees of Sweden and Norway "promote puppets of European imperialism" Come on.
Sweden and Norway are today arguably two of the World' most civilized, non-elitist, non-imperialist, and peace loving countries. There is hardly anything against the countries in recent history that roundly suggests that they are imperialist countries or support "Western" or other imperialism. The countries though monarchies, were never colonizing powers. The countries have been in the forefront of helping deprived and suffering victims of "Western" and other imperialism.
The Nobel Committees may not have done a perfect each and every time job but they do try hard to. Is it not the case that the Nobel Literature and Peace prizes' Committees are unpopular with "Western" conservative politicians and right-wing political activists and pundits? Why, one may wonder?
Naipal in my opinion is deserving of the Nobel literature prize. Are there other deserving writers that may be equally or more deserving? Yes there may be or indeed are. The fact that Naipal comes across sometimes as an angry and bitter man does not make him undeserving of that prize. He is rightly critical of India in my opinion. The issues that he raised in his criticisms have still not been addressed. India, for all its recent achievements still has some of the most cruel social and cultural systems and practices in the world. Anyone who believes that Naipal has misrepresented facts about African beliefs in a literary work, should rightly discuss the misrepresentations publicly or better still, write their own book.

oa
-----Original Message-----
From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafric...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Chidi Anthony Opara
Sent: Thursday, September 02, 2010 7:44 AM
To: USA Africa Dialogue Series

Chidi Anthony Opara

unread,
Sep 3, 2010, 4:59:25 AM9/3/10
to USA Africa Dialogue Series
"The Nobel Committees of Sweden and Norway "promote puppets of
European imperialism" Come on.
Sweden and Norway are today arguably two of the World' most civilized,
non-elitist, non-imperialist, and peace loving countries. There is
hardly anything against the countries in recent history that roundly
suggests that they are imperialist countries or support "Western" or
other imperialism. The countries though monarchies, were never
colonizing powers. The countries have been in the forefront of helping
deprived and suffering victims of "Western" and other imperialism.
The Nobel Committees may not have done a perfect each and every time
job but they do try hard to. Is it not the case that the Nobel
Literature and Peace prizes' Committees are unpopular with "Western"
conservative politicians and right-wing political activists and
pundits? Why, one may wonder?"
..................................OA

OA

In my opinion, you were not really disagreeing with the opinion
expressed in my post you were trying to reference, even though that is
what you are trying to show here. It is more like; "why should I agree
with this guy, even if everybody does?".

You used the words "arguably", "hardly" and "roundly", these words are
suggestive of the subjectivity of your postulation. May I remind you
here that the cultural and other interests of surviving European
Monarchs are usually interwoven. I will like you to note also that the
United states of America(USA) was never a colonizing power in the
sense you meant it, but have over the years collaborated in advancing
European imperialism.

The differences between your western conservative politicians and
right wing political activists, if they actually exist would be
forgotten whenever an opportunity to promote and support European
imperialism to which they all subscribe to presents itself. You are
however, entitled to your opinion, I like to respect that.

Be well always Prof.
> ...
>
> read more »

Chambi Chachage

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Sep 3, 2010, 5:26:30 AM9/3/10
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I wonder what definition of 'imperialism' is used here to defend Norway but, anyway, let me refer you to the following articles about its presence here:
 

Einar

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Sep 4, 2010, 1:56:28 AM9/4/10
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Dear Ken,
I agree completely i general and in detail - me too stopped reading
him after 'The believers'. I was also regarding my time too
precious for reading such rubbish. Where would this guy be published,
acclaimed and read (!!!) if not in the White World where racism is
so deep rooted for hundreds of years? Where? Maybe in India where you
also find a deep rooted racism but which did not make as much
damage in the world as White Supremacy - 'only' against its own
people
and the indigene peoples.
I even do not regard him as a good writer - there are plenty of
African
writers who are much better. But be sure - a man like Ngugi will never
be awarded the Nobel.
By the way - give a damn in the Nobel - it can't be taken serious any
more.

Einar Schlereth
> >http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2001/naipaul....
>
> >After the award he has not rested on his laurels but suitably
> >encouraged and rewarded has continued in the same vein, turning his
> >lights on and exposing other areas of darkness with even greater
> >intensity ( insensitivity?) and gained an even greater audience.
>
> >Can he also be accused of rank dishonesty in his “Beyond Belief:
> >Islamic Excursions among the Converted Peoples†?
>
> >I got a copy of his “ Half a life† from his Swedish literary agent for
> >Christmas, 2001 or 2 .She was at the Noble Banquet and  may have a
> >soft heart for him and seems to to think that he's a nice bloke.
> >That's women for you, can have a  soft spot for every kind of
> >scoundrel. Beauty and the Beast.
>
> >  But does the Selection committee of the Swedish Academy need to have
> >their heads examined ? Do they see the “racism† that you see in the
> >unrepentant Naipaul ­ or  do you think that conscious as he is, he  is
> >simply unaware of it ? Was it a mistake to award him the Nobel Prize
> >and should we tolerate the Swedish Academy awarding  such prizes to
> >writers such as Sir Vidia or should the prize be withdrawn now or even
> >posthumously?
>
> >http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK257&q=No...
> ...
>
> läs mer »

Anunoby, Ogugua

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Sep 7, 2010, 11:00:54 AM9/7/10
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Imperialism is used to mean “belief in empire building; domination by empire; and takeover and domination” (Encarta Dictionary)

I was not defending Norway. Norway does not need me or indeed any one to defend or speak for her. I was merely stating the facts as I know them to be. I might add that if the intention is for Tanzania (including Zanzibar of course) to secure the assistance of a  “western” country in the development of her energy resources in Africa, Norway (based on present knowledge) should be a good albeit credible candidate in my opinion.

One understands Africa’s suspicion of Europeans’ involvement in Africa. China has more suspicions of Japan’s given the countries’ past and recent history. The countries still trade with each other.  Japan is in fact a major foreign direct investor in China. The Chinese know to keep their feet on the ground and their eyes on the hill. Africans should do likewise.

 

oa

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