Friday, 19 December 2014

Interview with Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

I became black in America and I really hadn’t thought of myself as black in Nigeria. I think that identity in Nigeria was ethnic, religious…but race just wasn’t present.

    I like to say I’m happily black. So I don’t have a problem at all, sort of having skin the color of chocolate. But in this country I came to realize…that meant something, that it came with baggage and with all of these assumptions. And that the idea of black achievement was a remarkable thing. Whereas for me in Nigeria, it wasn’t. It was not. And I think that’s when I started to internalize what it meant and that’s when I started to push back. So for a long time I didn’t want to identify as black.

When you’re an immigrant and you come to this country, it’s very easy to internalize the mainstream ideas. It’s easy, for example, to think, “Oh, the ghettos are full of black people because they’re just lazy and they like to live in the ghettos,” because that’s sort of what mainstream thinking is. And then when you read about the American housing policies for the past 100 years it starts to make sense. And then it forces you to let go of these simple stereotypes. It was a conscious effort and it was an interesting journey, but still a journey.

 I think that as human beings we want to see ourselves reflected in stories. And I think that [Americanah] for many people is a reflection of a story that’s their’s but hasn’t really been told. We haven’t really seen that story in contemporary literature. I think that it makes people uncomfortable, and I find this particularly in the U.S. …I find that American readers, there’s often a defensiveness…

    But I also find that for a number of people it’s also a learning, too. The people who said to me that the book made them think differently about things, and I really value that. Lately, I’ve been thinking of the idea of storytelling as a social utility: how we can through telling stories understand one another better.”

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