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There is a variety of Nigerian patriots for whom the mantra "my country, good or bad" is a creed of some sorts. Not, though, in the manner of a self-evident truth, existing alongside other such axioms. But a fundamental dictum of conduct that must be observed, as it were, in "every field of national endeavour" regardless of the specific issues [...]
[view whole blog postI once attended a conference in Ibadan on the authenticity of Nigerian pidgin as a distinct Nigerian language worthy of both codification and general use. On the one hand, it was a necessary intervention in a country where the use of anything other than the colonial language has gained an unexpected derisive quality in particular circles in the new elite [...]
[view whole blog postOn April 9, Nigerian-American writer Nnedi Okorafor announced the acquisition of her new book Lagoon by the publishing house Hodder & Stoughton. As published on her blog, "at its heart a story about humanity at the crossroads between the past, present, and future, Lagoon touches on political and philosophical issues in the rich tradition of the very best science fiction, and ultimately asks us to [...]
[view whole blog postOn April 9, Nigerian-American writer Nnedi Okorafor announced the acquisition of her new book Lagoon by the publishing house Hodder & Stoughton. As published on her blog, "at its heart a story about humanity at the crossroads between the past, present, and future, Lagoon touches on political and philosophical issues in the rich tradition of the very best science fiction, and ultimately asks us to [...]
[view whole blog postby Dami Ajayi It always begins with a song. Then memory sets in. Soon you are coursing down familiar roads, back streets, broken waters. Suddenly, you are back here again. It is the same house in the poor district of Shagari Street with busybody neighbours. You are amongst the privileged few; you own a tokunbo car, you live in [...]
[view whole blog postby Carl Terver *FOR CHINUA ACHEBE* [After Anthills of the Savannah '. . . our fathers were defeated but they tried' p128] I fondle for ways to speak in the dialectic of Idemili and the laconian soliloquy of a thousand drums Wantaregh Now your words shall breathe on the embers of history and the sparkles, itinerant on untrodden paths [...]
[view whole blog post(for Ken Saro Wiwa) By Emmanuel Uweru Okoh My keen cry to Kenule: I, Fubara, of disjointed Fishnet and gaping boat, from the land of kernel Back feeling and staggering heritage. Of gasping fish and de-flowered flowers, Of frowning waters and stunted stalks. I sit on a lonely log; One of the few remaining. I write on a Dutchman's Dollar paper. It [...]
[view whole blog postby Edwin Eriata Oribhabor Waka go wie? Yo iye de wok so? yu no si wetin de shele? hie wetin de folo? hu wan ''wait'' mek i puo fo im hed? I no go puofo mai hed a no go du smesme fo dis mata A don de si wetin de hapun dem de se notin de hapun [...]
[view whole blog postIf you have ever listened to Professor Chukwuma Soludo bring abstract economic concepts to life with PowerPoint slides extravagantly peppered with charts and projections, you'd understand how he managed to get himself appointed Chief Economic Adviser to former President Obasanjo, and later governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Those who knew him cautioned that beneath his stylish [...]
[view whole blog postThe emergence of the online retail business in Nigeria was always going to upset a few established practices. One big question centered on how online retailing would play in the face-off between traditional retail outlets (our not so "supermarkets", and corner shops) and the discount shopping malls that are increasingly a central feature of our large urban centres. Whereas the [...]
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