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African Writers, Exile, and the Politics of a Global Diaspora
Abstract
“Twice Bitten: The Fate of Africa’s Culture Producers,” is the title of a lecture Wole Soyinka, the Nigerian Writer and Nobel Laureate, delivered at a gathering of African leaders in 1988. Noting the concern of the gathering for the epidemic of “brain drain” specialist expertise and cultural workers then sweeping all over Africa, Soyinka, himself a one-time famous exile, replied with scorn: “Lucky drainees! The brains of their stay-at-home colleagues will be found as grisly sediments on the riverbed of the Nile. Or in the stomach linings of African crocodiles and vultures” (112). This is vintage Soyinka; the distasteful and stomach-churning imagery was deliberately selected and served up for the consumption of the distinguished gathering composed, as it were, of many guilty African leaders or their representatives.
West Africa Review. ISSN: 1525-4488 (online).
Editors: Adeleke Adeeko, Nkiru Nzegwu, and Olufemi Taiwo.
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