Akinwale Oluwole
Soyinka holds the distinction of being the first African winner of the Nobel
Prize for Literature. His works, which have encompassed drama, novel and poetry
genres, have tended to reflect the syncretism of Yoruban culture and the
subversive instincts of his Egba heritage; traits which also marked the career
of his famous musician cousin Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.
With
his distinctive bushy Afro and fulsome goatee, whitened over the course of
time, Soyinka's physical appearance, cutting the seemingly contradictory figure
of a free spirited eccentric with the stentorian bearings befitting an
academic, has often been matched by the deeds of the man: one whose facility
with the complex usage of formal language is distilled through an engaging
acerbity and an often indelicate witticism.
Rebellious,
raffish, and something of a loose canon, he is not unlike his contemporaries
Chinua Achebe and Ngugi Wa Thiogo; much of his work having been steeped in
observations and analysis of Africa's colonial heritage and post-colonial woes
of despotism.
He
was born in 1934 to a solidly middle class family in the Western Nigerian city
of Abeokuta; the bastion of the Egba sub-group of the Yoruba. Although brought
up as a Christian, his life and works have consistently demonstrated a
pre-occupation with Yoruba mythology.
His
higher education began in 1952 at Government College, Ibadan. In 1954, he left
for England to study at the University of Leeds and completed his first degree,
a BA in English Literature, in 1957. During his sojourn, Soyinka worked as a
dramaturgist at the Royal Court Theatre in London. He busied himself making contacts
and associations with people in the arts world and wrote his first plays
including a light comedy, The Lion and the Jewel.
Returning
to Nigeria, after six years, Soyinka began studying African Drama, a devotion
he was able to focus upon as a result of the award of a Rockefeller bursary. It
enabled him to embark on an attempt at merging Western and Yoruba theater
traditions.
To this end, he founded an amateur dramatic ensemble called 'The 1960 Masks', and four years later the 'Orisun Theater Company,' which produced his plays, most of which he directed and in some of which he took acting roles. He pursued these endeavours while holding teaching positions at the Universities of Ibadan, Lagos and Ife.
To this end, he founded an amateur dramatic ensemble called 'The 1960 Masks', and four years later the 'Orisun Theater Company,' which produced his plays, most of which he directed and in some of which he took acting roles. He pursued these endeavours while holding teaching positions at the Universities of Ibadan, Lagos and Ife.
Yet,
these immersions in both the arts and academia were not the total ambit of his
range of expression. Increasingly, Soyinka began to apply himself within the
maelstrom of Nigerian post-independence politics.
Much of the dangerously conflictual nature of political life in the country was manifested in his native Western Region; strife-ridden and unstable because of an intensifying rivalry within the ruling Action Group party led by Obafemi Awolowo, and his deputy Ladoke Akintola.
Much of the dangerously conflictual nature of political life in the country was manifested in his native Western Region; strife-ridden and unstable because of an intensifying rivalry within the ruling Action Group party led by Obafemi Awolowo, and his deputy Ladoke Akintola.
In
1965, Soyinka was falsely accused of entering the broadcasting house in Ibadan
to force a producer to play a pre-recorded tape at gun point. He was
subsequently imprisoned, but later released, due in part to an international
campaign led by Western artists such as Norman Mailer.
Soyinka's political activism included a vain attempt at brokering a peace between the secessionist state of Biafra and the federal government of Nigeria. He was imprisoned in 1967 by the military leader, General Gowon, and released in 1969. His recollections of his incarceration, much of which was spent in solitary confinement, would be published in his work, The Man Died.
Soyinka's political activism included a vain attempt at brokering a peace between the secessionist state of Biafra and the federal government of Nigeria. He was imprisoned in 1967 by the military leader, General Gowon, and released in 1969. His recollections of his incarceration, much of which was spent in solitary confinement, would be published in his work, The Man Died.
Soyinka
inaugurated successive decades with two popular plays heavy on sacarcism: The
Trial of Brother Jero (1960)
and Madmen and Specialists (1970). The 1970s was a welter
of creativity. More of his plays including Death and the King's Horseman (1976) were staged internationally,
and a film version of his novel Kongi's Harvest was produced. He also took up several
academic appointments abroad.
Still,
politics remained at the fore of his activities. Whether it was criticising the
corruption of the Nigerian military or the tyranny of African despots or the
inhumanity of apartheid, Soyinka was in his element; his abiding concern being:
"the oppressive boot and the irrelevance of the colour of the foot that
wears it."
It
was a principle that he held to when campaigning against the dictatorship of
General Sani Abacha in Nigeria from where he was forced to flee in 1994,
although many felt him compromised when soon after his 1986 award of the Nobel
Prize, he accepted a position as chairman of the Road Safety Corps which had
been created under the auspices of the regime of Abacha's predecessor, General
Ibrahim Babangida.
Before this, Soyinka's personal pleas for clemency on behalf of Mamman Vatsa, a soldier who was also a published poet, proved futile, and Vatsa was shot before a firing squad for participating in a coup which many now acknowledge to have been non-existent.
Before this, Soyinka's personal pleas for clemency on behalf of Mamman Vatsa, a soldier who was also a published poet, proved futile, and Vatsa was shot before a firing squad for participating in a coup which many now acknowledge to have been non-existent.
Soyinka
continues to play the roles of an academic and political activist. His most
recent chairs have been in the United States while in Nigeria he has served as
a key member of PRONACO (Pro-Sovereign National Conference Coalition); a group
seeking a national conference to determine Nigeria's political future. He also
travels widely on the lecture circuit. In 2007, he published a memoir, You Must Set Forth at Dawn, the completion
of his earlier works, Ake: The Years of Childhood, Isara:
A Voyage around 'Essay, and Ibadan: The PenkelemeYears.
Be
it as playwright, lecturer, social critic, or raconteur, Wole Soyinka has
consistently enlightened and challenged through the creative use and
calibration of language; a special skill acknowledged by the award of the Nobel
prize and encapsulated in the words of the awarding Swedish Academy by their
reference to him as one "who in a wide cultural perspective and with
poetic overtones fashions the drama of existence."
Written
for the brochure accompanying the Diaspora Showcase Africa event held on 20th
September 2008 in Tucson, Arizona.
(c)
Adeyinka Makinde (2007)
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