In the postcolonial and cultural theory part of my work, I teach
something called the production of otherness at the graduate level. It
has to do with how people, voices, or forces who perceive themselves as
normative at certain points in history have represented those who do
not look like them as anomalous, primitive, and inferior. Those
producing ‘the other’ always see themselves as the
norm. In postcolonial theory, we call them “the
self”. For much of the last six hundred years, for instance,
the white race has been the most active producer of otherness,
operating as a self that represents all other races - especially the
black race - as its inferior others. Everywhere you turn to in human
history, you encounter the phenomenon of otherness production. The self
needs and breeds otherness in order to have value or even to exist. For
instance, to satisfy that necessity, Apartheid produced the kaffir;
Islam produced the infidel; Christianity produced the unbeliever;
heterosexuality produced the fag; Israelis produced the Araboushim;
Americans produced the nigga; European colonizers produced the native;
patriarchal man produced the hysteric woman. Even in Nigeria, the
nightmare known as the PDP is a self actively producing and victimizing
otherness: the other of the PDP is otherwise known as the ordinary
Nigerian.
Those
who produce otherness always feel compelled to manufacture and
acknowledge the rare exception who is then severed from his source and
hoisted as a trophy on a pedestal. The production of otherness is a
process that does not tolerate things in the singular. Rather, it
always strives to be a broad, all-encompassing basket into which the
othered is dropped and stereotyped. Hence, all the negative traits that
dominant white America churns out while othering the
“nigga” or the Native American are not designed to
describe just one “nigga” or one Indian. Niggas
are all like that. Indians are generally lazy. Kaffirs are thieves.
Africans are all diseased and poverty-stricken. The Araboushim are all
terrorists who want to destroy Israel. My broda take am easy. Shebi you
know women, they are all like that jare.
The list of blanket stereotyping is endless in the production of
otherness. The self that produces the other possesses a tongue that can
only victimize an entire people or an entire group. It is always
“they are all like that except…”
Except
LaShawnqua, my good African American female neighbor, who is not like
the rest of them. Except Dakota Black Horse, my Native Indian friend
who is so hard working and has nothing in common with, you know, other
Indians. Except Abdelmalik, my Araboushim friend who abhors terrorism.
Except Abdul Yahaya Jaiyeoba Okonkwo, my good Nigerian friend who is
not into 419. Welcome to the world of the exception that is created,
perhaps as a conscience-salving proposition, by the self and made to
represent everything his people or group is not! The world of this
exceptional creature is, however, a lonely one. Created by the self and
perpetually hoisted as a trophy of exception, this character, who is
not like his people or his group, is usually the entry port of a
generalized process of denigration of the very people who sired him. He
is the first victim of the very people who think they admire him by
othering him!
This
is Wole Soyinka’s lonely and curious world in Igbo cyber
discourse, raised to a cacophonous pitch recently by
Soyinka’s rightful disagreement with the cream of Yoruba
leadership over their unbelievable and mischievous attempts to
ethnicize the freedom action undertaken by MEND against the Atlas Cove
Jetty in Lagos – a property of Nigeria’s
oppressor-aggressor Federal Government. Soyinka’s
disagreement with certain voices in Yoruba leadership became an open
sesame for so many Igbo voices on the net – with a sprinkling
of south-south voices – to manufacture him as “the
good Yoruba”, thus tragically making Soyinka the latest
addition to a long philosophico-historical list of othered and
inferiorized subjects such as “the good Indian”,
“the good nigga”, “the good
native”, “the good kaffir” and, of
course, “the good Muslim”.
Before
making another foolish post on this subject in Nigerian listervs,
before writing another silly blog, before making another uninformed
chat room comment, I will advise non-Yoruba who admire Soyinka by
describing him as different from his people to urgently read Dorothy
Hammond’s and Alta Jablow’s The Africa that Never Was: Four Centuries of British Writing about Africa, Syed Hussein Alatas’s The Myth of the Lazy Native and Mahmood Mamdani’s Good Muslim, Bad Muslim in order to gain some awareness of the historical and philosophical dimensions of the production of otherness. In The Africa that Never Was,
our friends will discover how the bloody British spent four centuries
manufacturing lazy and dishonest Africans – except the good
African. In Alatas’s book, they will discover how, in over
three hundred years of contact, Western colonialists blanketed out the
Malays as lazy natives, a process in which they always systematically
allowed just enough room for the “one good Malay”
who is not like the rest. In Mamdani’s book, they will read
how, in the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks, it
became the ideological strategy of a crusading Christian West, led by
the crazy neocons around George Bush, to manufacture that good Muslim
who, in the nature of things, is not like the terrorist rest! These are
some of the introductory texts to my graduate seminar on the production
of otherness.
One
must make the concession that those non-Yoruba internet voices who are
hoisting Wole Soyinka as their trophy Yoruba genuinely believe that
they admire and respect the man, being blissfully unaware of the
insertion of their discourse into a broader frame of historical
production of otherness, which ironically makes Soyinka the very first
victim and target of their insults. Hence you encounter such silly
sentences as “Soyinka is the only Yoruba with a truly
nationalist outlook”, “Oh, how I wish other Yoruba
people would emulate him”, and other incrementally foolish
and annoying statements in the same direction. One must also conclude
that Soyinka’s emergency admirers have simply never mentally
self-projected into how they would feel if Nigerians from other ethnic
groups suddenly began to hoist Chinua Achebe on a pole as the one good
exception to his own people! To his own otherwise what people? Bad
people? Useless people? Otherwise what people? And doing it in a most
patronizing and condescending manner to boot!
If
there are folks who should be aware of the insulting nuances of
otherness, it is precisely the Igbo internet warriors who are now
trafficking in Soyinka’s otherness and so-called difference
from his people. The Igbos have been such egregious targets and victims
of this same process that it has become a near-permanent feature of how
they are represented on the net by non-Igbo ethnicist jingoists. Ever
so often, you encounter foolish statements by so many non-Igbo
emergency specialists of Igbo people and culture blanketing out an
entire people and culture with all the uncomplimentary epithets they
can find in the dictionary. Such Nigerian racists would of course be
quick to brandish the one Igbo friend they have or a previous sojourn
in Igbo land as immunity against charges of being anti-Igbo. I
addressed this phenomenon squarely in my essay,
“Acultural”, when a Washington-based Yoruba
intellectual and regular trafficker in needless inter-ethnic exchanges
of muck almost convinced himself that acultural and Igboness are
synonyms.
This,
in essence, is a terrain that those now trafficking in
Soyinka’s otherness and insulting him and his race in the
process know only too well. And I wonder where they got the idea that
Soyinka is a lone Yoruba voice in support of the agitations of the
Niger Delta. By which abracadabra did they arrive at the conclusion
that Soyinka is the only pan-Nigerian Yoruba nationalist? Where and
when did they conduct their polling in Yoruba land? Just what is the
empirical basis of their ‘authoritative’
submissions? Since most of those othering Soyinka as the only Yoruba
avatar of Nigerian nationalism are in fact known Igbo irredentists, we
must ask: wetin concern those who scream daily about the rebirth of the
principles of Biafra – and whose sentiments one is fully
sympathetic to – with anybody being a pan-Nigerian
nationalist in the first place? Wetin concern the agbero of Igbo
irredentism, rooted as it is in separatism, with the overload of
pan-Nigerian nationalism? How and where do the two meet?
Quite
frankly, with regard to MEND, Soyinka’s voice pales beside
that of Yinka Odumakin, human/civil/Yoruba rights activist and national
publicity secretary of Afenifere Renewal Group whose principled support
for MEND and the spirit of the Niger Delta struggle is near-legendary.
Although it is not yet ascertained, the recent death threats Mr.
Odumakin received may not be totally unconnected with his support for
MEND and the aspirations of the Niger Delta. The quiet hands of the
nest of killers in Abuja may not be far from those threats. If this
turns out to be true, what could possibly be more nationalistic than
this Yoruba icon of the younger generation receiving threats to his
life for his principled position on the Niger Delta question? Why is
Odumakin not hoisted as the exception to his people? Ah, he has no
Nobel! He is a less attractive candidate for otherness than a Nobel
laureate. Soyinka is even far from being the most consistent Yoruba
supporter of the legitimate agitations of the Niger Delta for equity,
fairness, justice, and humane treatment within the Nigerian federation.
He is just the most famous.
Soyinka
has in fact not been totally free of the occasional outrageous
prevarication on the Niger Delta question. As recently as 2008, Soyinka
advised the freedom fighters of the Niger Delta to lay down their arms
and engage the federal government in what he called
“intellectual militancy”! I was alarmed and
disappointed that such a hollow statement came from Soyinka at the
time. What the heck is intellectual militancy? What then did Ken
Saro-Wiwa do if not pacific intellectual militancy? And what was the
response of the corrupt criminals running the Federal Government of
Nigeria to Saro-Wiwa’s intellectual militancy? How do you
even begin to put anything intellectual and the charlatans of Abuja in
the same bracket? Although one owes nobody any explanation, suffice it
to state that I personally do not know any Yoruba in my own immediate
intellectual and ideological spheres who isn’t in full
support of MEND and the spirit of the Niger Delta struggle.
I
am yet to encounter anybody in my own networks and circuits of Yoruba
intellectual like-minds who has any sympathy for the Federal Government
of Nigeria. We are all unapologetically in support of the struggles of
the peoples of the Niger Delta and all other Nigerian victims of the
congenital criminals in Abuja. Have our friends even been reading
Yoruba public intellectuals of my generation such as Professors Wale
Adebanwi and Ebenezer Obadare? Those two friends of mine have been
vocal and they are not unknown quantities in public discourse. Have
they been reading Qansy Salako? As is, the Nigerian state is a criminal
organization in the hands of a cabal of deadly criminals in Abuja
holding all of us hostage. From Umuechem to Agge, from
Gbaramatu to Odi, and Zaki Biam the criminal actions of that state
collectively dehumanizes us, her victims. What then is so spectacular
about Soyinka’s principled call for a de-ethnicization of the
Atlas Cove freedom action that could possibly warrant the orgy of
othering and insults that one has witnessed thus far?
I
have stated time and again that those who invest in the production of
otherness are often blind and deaf to the intrinsic humanism of their
own cultures, starting with those odious Yoruba and Igbo characters who
spend their lives exchanging unprintable and unhelpful rubbish about
each other’s ethnic groups online. They don’t know
how to read and listen to the great narratives of their own culture.
What, for instance, does Chinua Achebe have to say about insulting
anybody as the exception to his own people? Well, there is this guy
called Ezeulu in Arrow of God. He tells the truth according to the ancestral protocols of his people – my father told me that the land does not belong to us.
Just because Ezeulu’s perception of the truth coincides with
the white man’s perception of things and goes against other
versions of the truth by his people, Captain Winterbottom and other
ignorant white men in the novel are quick to hoist him on a pole as
“the good Igbo” who is not like his people. The
exception to his people! And because Ezeulu is somewhat light-skinned,
the Europeans even surmise that his is able to tell the truth because
there must have been a mix up in his blood line – some
light-skinned people must somehow have penetrated Ezeulu’s
blood line along the way. The closer one is to whiteness, the better
one is able to tell the truth. Of course!
What Winterbottom and the ignorant Europeans in Arrow of God do to Ezeulu is exactly what some of Soyinka’s Igbo admirers online are doing to him! What part of Arrow of God
have they not read? What on earth do they imagine Achebe is saying
about the production of otherness? I am only waiting for them to
surmise that there must have been a contamination of
Soyinka’s bloodline along the way. Maybe some non-Yoruba
blood was accidentally infused in the bloodline? And they have already
started on that path by seeking extraneous explanations outside of the
Yoruba world for Soyinka’s genius. One listserv commentator
hinted and very nearly stated that Soyinka’s genius devolves
from his long history of association with Christopher Okigbo and Chinua
Achebe. We just merely narrowly escaped claims that Okigbo and Achebe
helped him write Death and the King’s Horseman!
Ever since I encountered that outrageous listserv comment, thankfully
dismissed by the irrepressible Valentine Ojo, I have been wondering if
my ability to string together a few sentences in English prose is not
due to my brotherly association with Obi Nwakanma, Okey Ndibe, Chika
Okeke-Agulu, Unoma Azuah, and so many other Igbo writers. You never
know!