THE AFRICAN PROVERB AND THE LIVING PRESENT A PARADIGM FROM RECENT IGBO PAREMIOLOGY
Contenido principal del artículo
Resumen
Modernity, the triptych upon which a corpus of Igbo sayings has been created, arose pari passu with the larger incidence of post-colonialism. As a phenomenon with a pervasive grip on the life and imagination of the African, post-colonialism has had its imprint on Igbo paremiology. Thus where the events out of which the Igbo paremiographer forged his/her sayings had taken place in the colonial era, it is safe to state that the coinage proper was likely to have been a post-colonial engagement since proverb formulation takes place long after the experience(s). It is then easy to observe a set of emergent saws which evidently show they are re-cent, and therefore ‘modernist.’ Such sayings are the outcome of the con-tact between Africa and the West as well as the power of the prevailing air of modern globalization sweeping across the continents. In this paper, we identify two subgenres of the Igbo proverb tradition, each of which evokes newness. The first category bears proverb terms which are unambiguously alien to the Igbo language vocabulary while the second is couched in a code-switch of Igbo and English, and which again readily flaunts its modernist credentials. Ordinarily, the proverb is associated with ancientness, with established custom and tradition, but the aphorisms in question are new, vibrant and audacious in rendition, and prove rather decisively that in Africa proverb-minting and usage remain an ongoing folkloric agenda.
Detalles del artículo
Citas
Anyanwu, P.A. “Engligbo: The Dynamics of English-Igbo Contact Situation.” African Journal of English Research 1.1-2 (July/October) 2002. 38-43.
Barry, Peter. 1995. Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002.
Ezenwa-Ohaeto. “Poetic Eloquence: The Concept of Madness in Igbo Proverbs.” Proverbium 7 (1990). 207-15.
Innes, C.L. Postcolonial Literatures in English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Inyama, N.F. “Source and Adaptation in the Proverb: A Nigerian Example.” Lore and Language 3.2 (1980). 47-61.
Krappe, A.H. The Science of Folk-Lore. London: Methuen, 1930.
Mieder, Wolfgang. “Popular Views of the Proverb.” Proverbium 2 (1985). 109-143.
Nwachukwu-Agbada, J.O.J. “’Bekee’ in Igbo Proverbial Lore.” Proverbium 5 (1988). 137-44.
Raji-Oyelade, Aderemi. “Postproverbials in Yoruba Culture: a Playful Blasphemy.” Research in African Literatures 30.1 (1999). 74-82.
Raji-Oyelade, Aderemi. “Posting the African Proverb: A Grammar of Yoruba Postproverbials or Logophagia, Logorrhea and the Grammar of Yoruba Postproverbials.” Proverbium 21 (2004). 299-314.
Shaka, Femi O. Modernity and the African Cinema. Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 2004.
Taylor, Archer. 1931. The Proverb. Intro. Wolfgang Mieder. Bern: Peter Lang, 1985.
Whiting, B.J. “The Origin of the Proverb.” Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature 13 (1931). 47-80.