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Cargando... Los intérpretes (1965)por Wole Soyinka
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Il marchio editoriale Calabuig propone titoli di qualità delle letterature del mondo. "Gli interpreti" è la seconda opera di Soyinka che ha ripescato dai fuori catalogo Jaca Book (dopo "L’uomo è morto"). Si tratta del primo romanzo (1965) dell’autore – all’epoca già noto in campo poetico e soprattutto teatrale – che mette in campo cinque giovani uomini da poco rientrati in Nigeria dopo gli studi all’estero. Già serpeggia la disillusione dopo la recente indipendenza. È un “romanzo” con le virgolette, perché non è palese la struttura di una storia che si sviluppa. Abbiamo piuttosto un mosaico di azioni e di dialoghi, con registri diversi e non sempre afferrabili di primo acchito (molto utile, per questo, l’Introduzione di Marco Grampa). Un’opera la cui lettura non va certo relegata ai… ritagli di tempo. The interpreters are a group of friends in newly independent Nigeria who have returned from study abroad (in England and the US) to take up positions in the new environment: one is a journalist, one a descendent of village chiefs, one a sculptor, one a painter, one (the only woman in the group) some kind of minor government worker). There isn't much plot; in Soyinka's dense, often allusive prose, the reader learns about the individuals in turn, often returning to their pasts before coming back to the present. Soyinka introduces other characters to give a fuller picture of life in the new country, and thoroughly satirizes many of them, including those who are corrupt and those who are still imbued with British traditions. Religion plays a part in the novel as well, both the traditional Yoruban gods and Christianity. In addition, parts of the novel are quite funny, and parts are quite scatological, including a theory held by the journalist character. I had a hard time knowing what to make of this novel, which I read thanks to a suggestion by another LTer. Clearly Soyinka is trying to paint a broad picture of both the challenges of a postcolonial society and the conflicts encountered by young men eager to find their way in a changing world. I found the women not as well developed as the male characters, and when a character reveals his homosexuality (a character who is already "confused" because he is an American in Nigeria and because, although he appears white, he is a quarter black and yearns to be thought of as black), other characters are disgusted. A lot that happens in this novel is symbolic in some way, especially the appearance in the second part of a strange church leader and his "apostles," including a young former thief re-named Noah. I would probably have to read this book again to make more sense of it, but it remains an interesting portrait of a time and place, including a vivid feeling for the waterways around Lagos before the environmental disaster caused by oil drilling. Soyinka was the first African to receive the Nobel Prize for literature and is mostly known for his plays and memoirs; this is one of only two novels he wrote. Difficult, but incredibly interesting. Soyinka's characters are both believable and surreal, and his vision of artists and politics provokes a careful critique of the spaces we expect (or hope) to change society. This is one of those books that may need to be read two-three times for a full understanding or impact, but the writing is fascinating, and makes the first journey well worth the while in terms of thought and entertainment. I have no doubt that the second read, and beyond, will be just as worth the time. With such beautiful writing, and fascinating turns, it goes quickly. Recommended. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Describes a group of young Nigerian intellectuals trying to do something worthwhile with their lives in a society ruled by corruption, cynicism, social climbing and conformity. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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But it is African as well, of course: the young characters are caught between the temptations of aspiring to one of the competing value-systems of western capitalism (most of them have studied abroad) and "old Africa" - where the tribal gods are competing with Christianity and Islam. At the same time, they are confronted with the unholy compromises that the current postcolonial ruling classes have made to protect their own interests.
Soyinka knows very well that adopting the form of the novel means that he's committing himself to the metropolitan mechanisms of production and distribution that go with that - he has to get it published in London, and he knows that the audience he can deliver it to is restricted by language, the written medium, access to books, and the leisure to read. Unlike plays and poems - accessible to everyone because they can be delivered orally over the radio, or live wherever actors can find a space to perform - novels are read only by people-who-read-novels, which for Soyinka in 1965 means students, foreigners, and the wealthy middle classes. That's presumably why he's only written one other novel. And why this is such a complicated, literary novel, full of direct and implied references to other books of the time, mostly at least slightly mocking: One of the characters keeps talking flippantly about cultivating his negritude (by going out in the sun); another has mapped out a pastiche existentialist philosophical system based on the pleasures of defecation; there's an American refugee from a James Baldwin novel who also happens to be a James Baldwin fan; there is a faculty party given by a pompous professor and subverted by one of the drunken characters, who is gatecrashing - to make sure we don't miss the Lucky Jim allusions there, we keep overhearing someone in the background talking about the Madrigal Group. And so on.
The nasty portrayal of the gay Baldwin-fan, Joe Golder, was probably offensive at the time, and of course feels doubly so now, when we know about the ways that the notion of homosexuality as an "unafrican" import has been used to whip up anger against LGBT people in so many African countries. We keep expecting Soyinka as narrator to step back from his characters' disgust with the fact of Golder's homosexuality and put it in perspective, but he never does, and it's difficult to avoid the conclusion that (at least when he wrote this) he shared their views.
Soyinka is a magnificent writer with a great feel for surprising and devastating images (often in very unexpected places, e.g. Like two halves of a broad bean, the pachydermous radiogram and the Managing Director.). He is also a dramatist who knows exactly how to place a major speech or a deflating incident where it can have the most impact, so this is never a dull book. But it is a complicated book, with a very heavy load of symbolism that never quite gets resolved, and many people who read it seem to feel afterwards that they aren't much further on. Given that it was published on the eve of a terrible civil war, it's perhaps not surprising that there is no neat ending with a vision for the future of Nigeria. ( )