TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title page i
Certification ii
Dedication iii
Acknowledgement iv
Table of Contents v
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
1.1 Biography and Works of the Poet.
1.2 Purpose of Study
1.3 The Nature of poetry
1.4 What is Anger?
1.5 Post Colonial Disillusionment
1.6 The Poetics and Politics of Tanure Ojaide
1.7 Scope of Study
1.8 Review of Criticism
1.9 Thesis Statement
CHAPTER
TWO: CAUSES AND EXPRESSIONS OF ANGER
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Pretence
2.2 Tyranny
2.3 Corruption
2.4 Plundering
CHAPTER
THREE: RESPONSES
3.0 Introduction
3.1
Resolve
3.2
Vengeance and Punishment
3.3
Revolution
3.4
Caution
CHAPTER
FOUR: CONCLUSION
Works Cited
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
BIOGRAPHY AND WORKS OF THE POET
Tanure Ojaide’s sixteen poetry
collections include Labyrinths of the Delta (1986), The Fate of Vultures
(1990), The Blood of Peace (1991), Daydreams of Ants (1997), Invoking the
Warrior Spirit: New and Selected Poems (1999), In the Kingdom of Songs: A
Trilogy (2002), I Want to Dance & Other Poems (2003), The Tale of the
Harmattan (2007), Waiting for the Hatching of a Cockerel (2008), and The Beauty
I Have Seen (2010). His other writings are: a memoir, Great Boys: An African
Childhood (1998); two collections of short stories titled God’s Medicine Men
& Other Stories (2004) and The Debt-Collector and Other Stories (2009);
three novels, Sovereign Body (2004), The Activist (2006), and Matters of the
Moment (2009); and six books of literary criticism, including The Poetry of
Wole Soyinka (1994), Poetic Imagination in Black Africa (1996), and Poetry,
Performance, and Art: Udje Dance Songs of the Urhobo People (2003).
Born in the oil-rich
but economically impoverished Niger Delta area of Nigeria, Tanure Ojaide was
raised by his grandmother in a riverine rural environment. He attended a
Catholic Grammar School and Federal Government College, Warri. Ojaide was
educated at the University of Ibadan, where he received a bachelor's degree in
English, and Syracuse University, where he received both the M.A. in Creative
Writing and Ph.D. in English. A Fellow in Writing of the University of Iowa,
his poetry awards include the Commonwealth Poetry Prize for the Africa Region
(1987), the All-Africa Okigbo Prize for Poetry (1988, 1997), the BBC Arts and
Africa Poetry Award (1988), and the Association of Nigerian Authors Poetry
Award (1988, 1994, 2003, and 2011). Sovereign Body was a runner-up for The
Commonwealth Literature Prize for the Africa Region in 2005. His non-fiction
manuscript, Drawing the Map of Heaven: An African Writer’s Experience of
America, was a runner-up for the Penguin Prize for African Writing (2010).
Ojaide taught for many years at The University of Maiduguri (Nigeria) and is
currently the Frank Porter Graham Distinguished Professor of Africana Studies
at The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where he teaches
African/Pan-African literatures and arts.
He received a
National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship for 1999/2000 academic year to
collect and study the "Udje Dance Songs of Nigeria's Urhobo People."
With a Fulbright fellowship, he taught at the University of Maiduguri and Delta
State University, Abraka, in the 2002/2003 academic year. He has read from his
poetry in Britain, Canada, France, Ghana, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria,
Spain, The Netherlands, the United States, and South Africa. In July 2005 an
international conference was held at Delta State University, Abraka, Nigeria
with participants from the USA, Canada, South Africa, Botswana, Cameroon, and
Nigeria to discuss Ojaide’s writings. The Second International Ojaide
Conference was held in July 2008 also at Delta State University, Abraka. He
represented Nigeria in Poetry Africa 2005 at The University of KwaZulu-Natal,
Durban, South Africa (October 10-16, 2005). Tanure Ojaide was the 2005
recipient of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s First Citizens
Bank Scholar Award for his creative writing and scholarship. His poetry, a
blend of oral traditions and modern techniques, has been translated into
Chinese, Dutch, French, and Spanish.
1.2
PURPOSE OF STUDY
The main prpose of this paper
is to potray poetry as an expression of anger using using TanureOjaide’s ‘the
fate of vultures and other poems’ as a case study. Specific objectives of the
study are to potray the poets anger as shown in his novel. The poet aimed at
showing awareness of his society by exposing and attacking its ills. He achieves these through the use of simple
language and proverbs. His simple verses
reflects his simple language. The
simplicity of language, the literary devices and orality that Ojaide has
adopted aid to lay bare the meaning of his poems. Ojaide’s use of indigenous language
contextualizes his poems and reflects his traditionality and orality.
1.3
THE NATURE OF POETRY
A fellow in writing
of the University of Iowa, his poetry awards include the Commonwealth Poetry
Prize for the Africa Region (198), the All African Okigbo Prize for Poetry
(1988,1997), the BBC Arts and Africa Poetry Award(1988) and the Association of
Nigerian Authors Poetry Award(1988,1994,2003, and 2011). Ojaide taught for many
years at the University of Maiduguri and currently the Frank Porter Graham
Distinguished Professor of Africana Studies University of North Carolina at
Charlotte, where he teaches African/ Pan-African literature and arts.
He received a
National Endowment for Humanities fellowship for 1999/2000 academic year to
collect and study the “Udje Dance Songs of Nigeria’s Urhobo People.” With a
Fulbright Fellowship, he taught at the University of Maiduguri and Delta
University, Abraka, in the 2002/2003 academic year. He has read from his poetry
in Britain, Canada, France, Ghana, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Spain,
the Netherland, the United States, and South Africa, Botswana, Cameroon, and to
Nigeria to discuss his writing. The second international Ojaide conference was
held in July 2008 also at Delta State University, Abraka. He represented
Nigeria in Poetry Africa 2005 at the University of Kwazulu Natal, Durban, South
Africa (October 10-16,200). Tenure Ojaide was the 2005 recipient of the
University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s First Citizen Bank Scholar Award
for his creative writing and Scholarship. His poetry, a blend of oral tradition
and modern techniques, has been translated into Chinese, Dutch, French, and
Spanish. He had published many works which includes; Waiting for the Hatching
of a Cockerel, The Tale of the Harmattan, Great Boys: An African
Childhood, The Activist, The Blood of Peace etc.
1.4 WHAT IS ANGER?
Anger is an emotional response related to one's
psychosociological interpretation of having been threatened. Often it indicates
when one's basic boundaries are violated. Some
have a learned tendency to react to anger through retaliation. Anger may be
utilized effectively when utilized to set boundaries or escape from dangerous
situations. Sheila Videbeck describes anger as a normal emotion that involves a
strong uncomfortable and emotional response to a perceived provocation. Raymond
Novaco of UC Irvine, who since 1975 has published a plethora of literature on
the subject, stratified anger into three modalities: cognitive (appraisals), somatic-affective
(tension and agitations), and behavioral (withdrawal and antagonism). William
DeFoore, an anger-management writer, described anger as a pressure cooker: we
can only apply pressure against our anger for a certain amount of time until it
explodes. Anger may have physical correlates such as increased heart
rate, blood pressure, and levels of adrenaline
and noradrenaline. Some view anger as an emotion which
triggers part of the fight or flight brain
response. Anger becomes the predominant feeling behaviorally, cognitively, and
physiologically when a person makes the conscious choice to take action to
immediately stop the threatening behavior of another outside force. The
English term originally comes from the term anger of Old Norse
language. Anger can have many physical and mental consequences.
1.5
THE POETICS AND POLITICS OF TANURE OJAIDE
While Marxism stands
for the destruction of the capitalist state and has as its aim in the withering
away of the state all forms of institutionalized violence, Marxist not only
support the right of the working class to exercise a domination over
bourgeoisie, they actively fight for that.
The society from
which an artist metaphors always in most cases informs the issues He writes
about. It is a valid truth that literature is not created in the vacuum as it
mediates on social political issues that the artist grapples with in his
existence. Charles Bressler gives vents to the above when he says that;
… society shapes our
consciousness; that social and economic conditions directly influences how
what we believe and values and that Marxism offers us an opportunity and
a plan for changing the world from a play of bigotry, hatred and conflict
resulting from class struggle to classless society, where wealth, opportunity
and education are actually accessible for all people (115).
Tanure Ojaide and Ken
Saro-Wiwa find themselves in a society that is characterized by a distinctive
social stratification, featuring the oppressed and the oppressor. Both Ken
Saro-Wiwa and Tanure Ojaide calls for a non violent revolution that will over
throw the bourgeoisie class that is represented by the Nigerian Government and
the multinationals. They therefore adopt the Marxist ideology,
Nwahunanya(2011)emits that;
Creative works of literature are
product of the society’s libido.
The psychological approach may
illuminate the create process,
but the goings-on in the psyche itself
are not central as such to
literature since they are only
preparatory to the act of creation
and psychological truths become
artistic values only if
they enhance coherence and complexity
in a work. (36)
The reason for the
foregoing is that the writer is an active participant of his society and by
extension recreates the collective experience of the people. The African
experience thus transcends the concept of “Arts for Arts sake” theory but
performs a function in the society in which it thrives and emerging into a
moralistic light in questioning of societal practices.
A non-violent
revolution is a revolution using mostly campaigns of civil resistance, non
violent-protest to bring about the departure of government seen as tyrannical.
This concept of non-violence is seen in Ken Saro Wiwa’s A Month and A
Day: A Detention Diaryand Tanure Ojaide’s Great Boys: AnAfrican
Childhood, these autobiographies portrays disillusionment and
exploitation that constitute the social realities of majority of the Niger
Delta region. The authors succinctly display their contempt for the agents of
exploitation and degradation of the environment. While Ken Saro-Wiwa’s approach
was peaceful protest and non violent direct confrontation with the forces of exploitation
and a clarion call for resource control by the people. Tanure Ojaide’s approach
was a subtle presentation of how the comings of multinational have set in doom
in the Niger Delta region and to awaken the people to the past “glories” of the
region and its environment.
Although the
historical canon of the world is replicated with instance of revolution which
varied in terms of the method and motivations but the end product in most cases
have always being the change in the socio political and economic construct of
the society.
1.6 SCOPE
OF STUDY
This study shall be
limited to Tenure Ojaide’s the fate of the vulture and other poems.
The consideration of these works is because the writers were able to raise
significant issues of national importance with the main purpose of calling on
the people that are concern about this issue to profer solutions to the plights
of the masses. We have decided to limit this discourse within this scope
because; the themes of exploitation and official complicity are the bean of the
peoples’ plights.
WORK
CITED
1. Nwahunanya,
Chinyere.” The Lachrymal consciousness in the Niger Delta”From Boom to Doom:
Protest and Conflict Resolution in the Literature of the Niger Delta. Ed.
Nwahunanya Chinyere. Owerri: Springfield publishers Ltd.2011.38-39. Print