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The danger of a single story

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    I'm a storyteller.
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    And I would like to tell you
    a few personal stories
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    about what I like to call
    "the danger of the single story."
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    I grew up on a university campus
    in eastern Nigeria.
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    My mother says that I started
    reading at the age of two,
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    although I think four
    is probably close to the truth.
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    So I was an early reader,
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    and what I read were British
    and American children's books.
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    I was also an early writer,
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    and when I began to write,
    at about the age of seven,
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    stories in pencil
    with crayon illustrations
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    that my poor mother was obligated to read,
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    I wrote exactly the kinds
    of stories I was reading:
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    All my characters were
    white and blue-eyed,
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    they played in the snow,
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    they ate apples,
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    (Laughter)
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    and they talked a lot about the weather,
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    how lovely it was
    that the sun had come out.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, this despite the fact
    that I lived in Nigeria.
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    I had never been outside Nigeria.
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    We didn't have snow, we ate mangoes,
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    and we never talked about the weather,
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    because there was no need to.
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    My characters also drank
    a lot of ginger beer,
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    because the characters
    in the British books I read
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    drank ginger beer.
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    Never mind that I had no idea
    what ginger beer was.
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    (Laughter)
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    And for many years afterwards,
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    I would have a desperate desire
    to taste ginger beer.
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    But that is another story.
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    What this demonstrates, I think,
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    is how impressionable
    and vulnerable we are
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    in the face of a story,
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    particularly as children.
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    Because all I had read were books
    in which characters were foreign,
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    I had become convinced that books
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    by their very nature
    had to have foreigners in them
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    and had to be about things with which
    I could not personally identify.
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    Now, things changed
    when I discovered African books.
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    There weren't many of them available,
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    and they weren't quite as easy to find
    as the foreign books.
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    But because of writers like
    Chinua Achebe and Camara Laye,
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    I went through a mental shift
    in my perception of literature.
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    I realized that people like me,
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    girls with skin the color of chocolate,
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    whose kinky hair could not form ponytails,
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    could also exist in literature.
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    I started to write
    about things I recognized.
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    Now, I loved those
    American and British books I read.
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    They stirred my imagination.
    They opened up new worlds for me.
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    But the unintended consequence
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    was that I did not know
    that people like me
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    could exist in literature.
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    So what the discovery of African writers
    did for me was this:
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    It saved me from having a single story
    of what books are.
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    I come from a conventional,
    middle-class Nigerian family.
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    My father was a professor.
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    My mother was an administrator.
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    And so we had, as was the norm,
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    live-in domestic help, who would often
    come from nearby rural villages.
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    So, the year I turned eight,
    we got a new house boy.
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    His name was Fide.
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    The only thing my mother told us about him
    was that his family was very poor.
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    My mother sent yams and rice,
    and our old clothes, to his family.
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    And when I didn't finish my dinner,
    my mother would say,
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    "Finish your food! Don't you know?
    People like Fide's family have nothing."
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    So I felt enormous pity for Fide's family.
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    Then one Saturday,
    we went to his village to visit,
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    and his mother showed us
    a beautifully patterned basket
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    made of dyed raffia
    that his brother had made.
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    I was startled.
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    It had not occurred to me
    that anybody in his family
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    could actually make something.
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    All I had heard about them
    was how poor they were,
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    so that it had become impossible for me
    to see them as anything else but poor.
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    Their poverty was my single story of them.
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    Years later, I thought about this
    when I left Nigeria
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    to go to university in the United States.
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    I was 19.
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    My American roommate was shocked by me.
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    She asked where I had learned
    to speak English so well,
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    and was confused when I said that Nigeria
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    happened to have English
    as its official language.
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    She asked if she could listen
    to what she called my "tribal music,"
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    and was consequently very disappointed
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    when I produced my tape of Mariah Carey.
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    (Laughter)
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    She assumed that I did not know
    how to use a stove.
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    What struck me was this:
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    She had felt sorry for me
    even before she saw me.
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    Her default position
    toward me, as an African,
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    was a kind of patronizing,
    well-meaning pity.
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    My roommate had a single story of Africa:
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    a single story of catastrophe.
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    In this single story,
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    there was no possibility of Africans
    being similar to her in any way,
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    no possibility of feelings
    more complex than pity,
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    no possibility of a connection
    as human equals.
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    I must say that before I went to the U.S.,
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    I didn't consciously identify as African.
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    But in the U.S., whenever Africa came up,
    people turned to me.
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    Never mind that I knew nothing
    about places like Namibia.
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    But I did come to embrace
    this new identity,
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    and in many ways I think
    of myself now as African.
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    Although I still get quite irritable
    when Africa is referred to as a country,
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    the most recent example being
    my otherwise wonderful flight
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    from Lagos two days ago,
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    in which there was an announcement
    on the Virgin flight
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    about the charity work in "India,
    Africa and other countries."
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    (Laughter)
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    So, after I had spent some years
    in the U.S. as an African,
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    I began to understand
    my roommate's response to me.
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    If I had not grown up in Nigeria,
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    and if all I knew about Africa
    were from popular images,
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    I too would think that Africa
    was a place of beautiful landscapes,
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    beautiful animals,
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    and incomprehensible people,
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    fighting senseless wars,
    dying of poverty and AIDS,
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    unable to speak for themselves
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    and waiting to be saved
    by a kind, white foreigner.
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    I would see Africans
    in the same way that I,
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    as a child, had seen Fide's family.
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    This single story of Africa ultimately
    comes, I think, from Western literature.
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    Now, here is a quote from the writing
    of a London merchant called John Lok,
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    who sailed to west Africa in 1561
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    and kept a fascinating
    account of his voyage.
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    After referring to the black Africans
    as "beasts who have no houses,"
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    he writes, "They are also
    people without heads,
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    having their mouth and eyes
    in their breasts."
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    Now, I've laughed
    every time I've read this.
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    And one must admire
    the imagination of John Lok.
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    But what is important about his writing
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    is that it represents the beginning
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    of a tradition of telling
    African stories in the West:
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    A tradition of Sub-Saharan Africa
    as a place of negatives,
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    of difference, of darkness,
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    of people who, in the words
    of the wonderful poet Rudyard Kipling,
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    are "half devil, half child."
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    And so, I began to realize
    that my American roommate
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    must have throughout her life
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    seen and heard different versions
    of this single story,
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    as had a professor,
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    who once told me that my novel
    was not "authentically African."
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    Now, I was quite willing to contend
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    that there were a number of things
    wrong with the novel,
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    that it had failed in a number of places,
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    but I had not quite imagined
    that it had failed
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    at achieving something
    called African authenticity.
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    In fact, I did not know
    what African authenticity was.
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    The professor told me that my characters
    were too much like him,
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    an educated and middle-class man.
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    My characters drove cars.
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    They were not starving.
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    Therefore they were not
    authentically African.
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    But I must quickly add
    that I too am just as guilty
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    in the question of the single story.
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    A few years ago,
    I visited Mexico from the U.S.
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    The political climate in the U.S.
    at the time was tense,
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    and there were debates going on
    about immigration.
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    And, as often happens in America,
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    immigration became
    synonymous with Mexicans.
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    There were endless stories of Mexicans
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    as people who were
    fleecing the healthcare system,
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    sneaking across the border,
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    being arrested at the border,
    that sort of thing.
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    I remember walking around
    on my first day in Guadalajara,
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    watching the people going to work,
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    rolling up tortillas in the marketplace,
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    smoking, laughing.
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    I remember first feeling slight surprise.
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    And then, I was overwhelmed with shame.
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    I realized that I had been so immersed
    in the media coverage of Mexicans
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    that they had become one thing in my mind,
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    the abject immigrant.
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    I had bought into
    the single story of Mexicans
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    and I could not have
    been more ashamed of myself.
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    So that is how to create a single story,
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    show a people as one thing,
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    as only one thing,
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    over and over again,
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    and that is what they become.
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    It is impossible to talk
    about the single story
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    without talking about power.
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    There is a word, an Igbo word,
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    that I think about whenever I think about
    the power structures of the world,
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    and it is "nkali."
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    It's a noun that loosely translates
    to "to be greater than another."
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    Like our economic and political worlds,
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    stories too are defined
    by the principle of nkali:
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    How they are told, who tells them,
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    when they're told,
    how many stories are told,
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    are really dependent on power.
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    Power is the ability not just to tell
    the story of another person,
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    but to make it the definitive
    story of that person.
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    The Palestinian poet
    Mourid Barghouti writes
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    that if you want to dispossess a people,
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    the simplest way to do it
    is to tell their story
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    and to start with, "secondly."
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    Start the story with the arrows
    of the Native Americans,
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    and not with the arrival of the British,
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    and you have an entirely different story.
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    Start the story with
    the failure of the African state,
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    and not with the colonial
    creation of the African state,
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    and you have an entirely different story.
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    I recently spoke at a university
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    where a student told me
    that it was such a shame
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    that Nigerian men were physical abusers
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    like the father character in my novel.
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    I told him that I had just read a novel
    called "American Psycho" --
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    (Laughter)
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    -- and that it was such a shame
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    that young Americans
    were serial murderers.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Now, obviously I said this
    in a fit of mild irritation.
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    (Laughter)
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    But it would never have
    occurred to me to think
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    that just because I had read a novel
    in which a character was a serial killer
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    that he was somehow
    representative of all Americans.
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    This is not because I am
    a better person than that student,
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    but because of America's cultural
    and economic power,
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    I had many stories of America.
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    I had read Tyler and Updike
    and Steinbeck and Gaitskill.
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    I did not have a single story of America.
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    When I learned, some years ago,
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    that writers were expected
    to have had really unhappy childhoods
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    to be successful,
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    I began to think about how I could invent
    horrible things my parents had done to me.
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    (Laughter)
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    But the truth is that I had
    a very happy childhood,
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    full of laughter and love,
    in a very close-knit family.
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    But I also had grandfathers
    who died in refugee camps.
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    My cousin Polle died because
    he could not get adequate healthcare.
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    One of my closest friends,
    Okoloma, died in a plane crash
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    because our fire trucks
    did not have water.
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    I grew up under repressive
    military governments
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    that devalued education,
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    so that sometimes, my parents
    were not paid their salaries.
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    And so, as a child, I saw jam
    disappear from the breakfast table,
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    then margarine disappeared,
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    then bread became too expensive,
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    then milk became rationed.
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    And most of all, a kind
    of normalized political fear
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    invaded our lives.
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    All of these stories make me who I am.
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    But to insist on only
    these negative stories
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    is to flatten my experience
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    and to overlook the many other
    stories that formed me.
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    The single story creates stereotypes,
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    and the problem with stereotypes
    is not that they are untrue,
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    but that they are incomplete.
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    They make one story become the only story.
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    Of course, Africa is a continent
    full of catastrophes:
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    There are immense ones,
    such as the horrific rapes in Congo
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    and depressing ones,
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    such as the fact that 5,000 people apply
    for one job vacancy in Nigeria.
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    But there are other stories
    that are not about catastrophe,
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    and it is very important, it is just
    as important, to talk about them.
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    I've always felt that it is impossible
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    to engage properly
    with a place or a person
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    without engaging with all of the stories
    of that place and that person.
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    The consequence
    of the single story is this:
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    It robs people of dignity.
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    It makes our recognition
    of our equal humanity difficult.
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    It emphasizes how we are different
    rather than how we are similar.
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    So what if before my Mexican trip,
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    I had followed the immigration
    debate from both sides,
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    the U.S. and the Mexican?
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    What if my mother had told us
    that Fide's family was poor
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    and hardworking?
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    What if we had an African
    television network
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    that broadcast diverse
    African stories all over the world?
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    What the Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe
    calls "a balance of stories."
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    What if my roommate knew
    about my Nigerian publisher,
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    Muhtar Bakare,
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    a remarkable man who left
    his job in a bank
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    to follow his dream
    and start a publishing house?
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    Now, the conventional wisdom
    was that Nigerians don't read literature.
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    He disagreed.
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    He felt that people
    who could read, would read,
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    if you made literature affordable
    and available to them.
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    Shortly after he published my first novel,
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    I went to a TV station
    in Lagos to do an interview,
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    and a woman who worked there
    as a messenger came up to me and said,
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    "I really liked your novel.
    I didn't like the ending.
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    Now, you must write a sequel,
    and this is what will happen ..."
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    (Laughter)
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    And she went on to tell me
    what to write in the sequel.
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    I was not only charmed, I was very moved.
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    Here was a woman, part of the ordinary
    masses of Nigerians,
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    who were not supposed to be readers.
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    She had not only read the book,
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    but she had taken ownership of it
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    and felt justified in telling me
    what to write in the sequel.
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    Now, what if my roommate knew
    about my friend Funmi Iyanda,
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    a fearless woman who hosts
    a TV show in Lagos,
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    and is determined to tell the stories
    that we prefer to forget?
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    What if my roommate knew
    about the heart procedure
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    that was performed in the Lagos
    hospital last week?
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    What if my roommate knew
    about contemporary Nigerian music,
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    talented people singing
    in English and Pidgin,
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    and Igbo and Yoruba and Ijo,
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    mixing influences from Jay-Z to Fela
  • 15:51 - 15:53
    to Bob Marley to their grandfathers.
  • 15:54 - 15:56
    What if my roommate knew
    about the female lawyer
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    who recently went to court in Nigeria
    to challenge a ridiculous law
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    that required women to get
    their husband's consent
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    before renewing their passports?
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    What if my roommate knew about Nollywood,
  • 16:09 - 16:13
    full of innovative people making
    films despite great technical odds,
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    films so popular
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    that they really are the best example
    of Nigerians consuming what they produce?
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    What if my roommate knew about
    my wonderfully ambitious hair braider,
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    who has just started her own business
    selling hair extensions?
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    Or about the millions of other Nigerians
    who start businesses and sometimes fail,
  • 16:31 - 16:34
    but continue to nurse ambition?
  • 16:35 - 16:37
    Every time I am home I am confronted
  • 16:37 - 16:40
    with the usual sources of irritation
    for most Nigerians:
  • 16:40 - 16:43
    our failed infrastructure,
    our failed government,
  • 16:43 - 16:46
    but also by the incredible resilience
  • 16:46 - 16:49
    of people who thrive
    despite the government,
  • 16:49 - 16:50
    rather than because of it.
  • 16:51 - 16:54
    I teach writing workshops
    in Lagos every summer,
  • 16:54 - 16:57
    and it is amazing to me
    how many people apply,
  • 16:57 - 17:00
    how many people are eager to write,
  • 17:00 - 17:01
    to tell stories.
  • 17:02 - 17:05
    My Nigerian publisher and I
    have just started a non-profit
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    called Farafina Trust,
  • 17:07 - 17:10
    and we have big dreams
    of building libraries
  • 17:10 - 17:12
    and refurbishing libraries
    that already exist
  • 17:12 - 17:15
    and providing books for state schools
  • 17:15 - 17:17
    that don't have anything
    in their libraries,
  • 17:17 - 17:20
    and also of organizing lots
    and lots of workshops,
  • 17:20 - 17:21
    in reading and writing,
  • 17:21 - 17:24
    for all the people who are eager
    to tell our many stories.
  • 17:24 - 17:26
    Stories matter.
  • 17:26 - 17:28
    Many stories matter.
  • 17:28 - 17:32
    Stories have been used
    to dispossess and to malign,
  • 17:32 - 17:36
    but stories can also be used
    to empower and to humanize.
  • 17:37 - 17:39
    Stories can break the dignity of a people,
  • 17:39 - 17:43
    but stories can also repair
    that broken dignity.
  • 17:44 - 17:46
    The American writer
    Alice Walker wrote this
  • 17:46 - 17:50
    about her Southern relatives
    who had moved to the North.
  • 17:50 - 17:52
    She introduced them to a book about
  • 17:52 - 17:54
    the Southern life
    that they had left behind.
  • 17:56 - 17:59
    "They sat around,
    reading the book themselves,
  • 17:59 - 18:05
    listening to me read the book,
    and a kind of paradise was regained."
  • 18:06 - 18:08
    I would like to end with this thought:
  • 18:08 - 18:11
    That when we reject the single story,
  • 18:11 - 18:14
    when we realize that
    there is never a single story
  • 18:14 - 18:16
    about any place,
  • 18:16 - 18:18
    we regain a kind of paradise.
  • 18:19 - 18:20
    Thank you.
  • 18:20 - 18:23
    (Applause)
Title:
The danger of a single story
Speaker:
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Description:

Our lives, our cultures, are composed of many overlapping stories. Novelist Chimamanda Adichie tells the story of how she found her authentic cultural voice -- and warns that if we hear only a single story about another person or country, we risk a critical misunderstanding.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:29
  • The English transcript was updated on 2/12/2015.

  • The English transcript was updated on April 26, 2016.

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    Now, here is a quote from the writing
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