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Long-list for the Nigeria Prize for Literature

Long-list for the Nigeria Prize for Literature

The Advisory Board for The Nigeria Prize for Literature announced the long-list of 11 drawn from 173 books, for the 2019 edition of the prize over a month ago. All 11 long-listed authors are in the running for winning the cash prize of $100,000 (₦36,200, ...

TSSF journal homepage

We Launched The Single Story Foundation Journal

Contact: Tiah Beautement Email: journal@singlestory.org The Single Story Foundation Journal is launched The editors of TSSF Journal are excited to announce the launch of its inaugural issue. Our journal is an online journal. You can read individual pub ...

Novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie after a reading of her book ‘Americanah’ in Lagos in 2013. Akintunde Akinleye /Reuters

New African literature is disrupting what Western presses prize

By Jeanne-Marie Jackson, Johns Hopkins University African literature is the object of immense international interest across both academic and popular registers. Far from the field’s earlier, post-colonial association with marginality, a handful of star “Afropolitan” names are at the forefront of global trade publishing. Books like Chimamanda Adichie’s “Americanah” and “Half of a Yellow Sun”, Teju Cole’s “Open City”, Taiye Selasi’s “Ghana Must Go” and Yaa Gyasi’s “Homegoing” have confounded neat divisions between Western and African literary traditions. The Cameroonian novelist Imbolo Mbue captured a million-dollar contract for her first book, “Behold the Dreamers”. That’s even before it joined the Oprah’s Book Club pantheon this year. Such commercial prominence, though, has attracted considerable and unsurprising push back from Western and Africa-based critics alike. Far from advancing narratives with deep roots in local African realities, such critics fear, many of Africa’s most “successful” writers hawk a superficial, overly diasporic, or even Western-focused vision of the continent.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="237"] Noviolet Bulawayo was shortlisted for the Man Booker prize in 2013 for her book Olivia Harris/Reuters[/caption]
The most visible of these critiques has been directed at the Zimbabwean writer NoViolet Bulawayo’s “We Need New Names” (2013). The Nigerian novelist Helon Habila worried in a review in the London Guardian that it was “poverty-porn”. The popular Nigerian critic Ikhide Ikheloa (“Pa Ikhide”) frequently makes a similar point. Fellow Nigerian writer Adaobi Nwaubani critiqued the West’s hold on Africa’s book industry in a much-circulated New York Times piece called “African Books for Western Eyes”. ...

Our Board Members and Publications

Contact: Murewa Olubela murewa.olubela@singlestory.org TSSF Announces BoD and AB Members and Launches Two Publications TAMPA (Oct. 17, 2016) – The Single Story Foundation (TSSF) today announces the appointment of five members to its Board of Directors ...

young African writers

Africa’s Young Literary Stars

African literature in recent times has been breaking new grounds in international markets, like the United States, where historically it has been overlooked. Writers like Chinua Achebe, Chimamanda Adichie, etc. have led the race in getting African literature into global bookstores and libraries. Inspired by those who came before, a new wave of young, gifted African writers are breaking bounds, fearlessly telling their stories, some in multiple ways. With publishing deals, accomplished debuts, multiple awards and rave reviews under their belts, these writers are penning stories that juxtapose classic themes with unique views and voices. We, at The Single Story Foundation, realize that there are many more successful African writers and poets out there than the 10 listed in this post. We doubt we adequately can name all amazing African writers in one blog post. Below are 10 contemporary African writers 30 years and under, except Imbolo Mbue we couldn't help but add, who keep making marks in the literary world at large. ...
The Single Story Foundation 10 African Storytellers you need to know about now

11 African Storytellers you should know

An integral aspect of changing stereotypes, storytelling is an inherent way of life for Africans. Everybody has a tale to tell and everybody tells it in different ways. As Gcina Mhlophe points out:

Stories are our friends, our counsellors and our teachers. They are a means of nurturing a moral culture in the hearts and minds of people. They stir the imagination, they bring together people and they break down barriers. It is a tradition we must never lose in the rush to the cities.

In no particular order, below are 11 Africans telling their stories and others in multiple formats. They all are doing amazing things, making great strides at home and abroad. ...

Nollywood single story

Nollywood single story problem

A while ago, novelist Chimamanda Adichie gave a keynote speech at TED Talks titled "The Danger of a Single Story." What’s Africa’s single story? The tainted lens through which the news media portrays Africa to the world; mostly starving kids too weak to drive away the flies that swarm them, famine, hunger, water projects etc. Then there’s the Hollywood narrative. African men are mercenaries, warlords and blood thirsty. This is mostly what the West is exposed to about Africa and Africans. Now, many of those portrayals aren’t completely untrue. But, they are a single narrative out of many – most of them still untold. Just like the guests on Jerry Springer’s show don’t represent the U.S. narrative, these stories don’t represent all of us across Africa either. ...

7 African literature books to read if you love Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Author: Zaynab Quadri

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie clocked 38 yesterday and oh well you have read all her books.You blazed through Purple Hibiscus, you ran out and bought Half of a Yellow Sun, The Thing Around Your Neck, and Americanah. And you finished them in two sleepless nights.

Now your sleepless nights are spent yearning for another Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie book and you wish that Americanah movie could just come out faster.

Well, don't fret or fear. These African literature books will keep you up at night, in a good way, and hold you over until your next Adichie fix. ...

African Literary Magazines

African Literary Magazines

We present to you, African Literary Magazines, the directory you've been searching for. A needed haven for writers, artistes and creative people of African descent, African Literary Magazines provides you information about literary organizations that cater to your works. We know how hard it is to start magazine shopping after completing your work and being encumbered by the process. Our goal at The Single Story Foundation is to provide you with the resources to tell your story efficiently. Hopefully, this directory will help in that regard. ...
otobong_nkanga

Otobong Nkanga wins 8th Yanghyun Art Prize

Otobong Nkanga, a Nigerian, has become the first African to win the Korean Yanghyun Foundation Artist Award. The award was presented in Seoul, Korea. She will receive 100 million won ($86,300) and an opportunity to hold a solo exhibition at any chosen museum around the world, as part of her prize for winning the award. She was selected for her outstanding creativity in media and motivational photography, drawing, painting, sculpture, installation and video. ...