Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Book Discussion on Saturday, August 1, 2015, 2:00 P.M., San Leandro Main Library

Ghana Must Go by Taiye Selasi

Novelists have become very coy about sharing their biographical information on their official websites, maybe because they want the story to be the one they wrote and not the one about them. So once again I have been forced to turn to Wikipedia as a last resort. The usual caveats apply.

Taiye Selasi was born November 2, 1979, in London, England, the first of twin sisters (Taiye and Kehinde) and grew up in Brookline, Massachusetts. She received a BA in American Studies from Yale and a Master's in International Relations from Nuffield College, Oxford. Ms. Selasi's mother is a prominent pediatrician in Ghana and the Baltimore area, her father a surgeon practicing in Saudi Arabia, and her twin sister a rehabilitation medicine specialist practicing in the Boston area. Selasi didn't meet her father until she was 12 years old. In the video below, she talks about Ghana Must Go and challenging preconceptions about Africa and Africans.



The Makola Market in the center of Accra, Ghana


Skyline of Lagos, Nigeria














Why "Ghana Must Go"?


At the end of the book, Fola is given a memento of her late husband
packed in a "Ghana Must Go" bag. I had to look up what that meant, and I found it in the blog of a young woman named Anne Chia.

As Ms. Selasi mentioned briefly in her book, in 1983, Nigeria's President Shagari announced that within a few weeks all immigrants without the proper documentation would be ordered to leave Nigeria. This order affected about a million Ghanaian residents and about another million from other West African countries. The immigrants facing expulsion were forced to pack up whatever they could into whatever luggage they could find, and the most ubiquitous bag used for this purpose was a large, deep, inexpensive checkered tote bag, which Anne Chia describes in her blog post thus:
It is quite popular worldwide and is used for laundry and to store beddings or even as holiday excess luggage in many countries in the world. But specifically, in Germany it is “Tuekenkoffer”, which means the Turkish suitcase. In the United States of America, it is called the “Chinatown tote”. In Guyana, it is the “Guyanese Samsonite”. In Ghana and Nigeria, where the bags are celebrities and the most recognisable signature of “movement” it is known simply as the “Ghana must go” bag.

The typical checkered pattern has since also taken on the name of "Ghana Must Go" and has been incorporated into African-influenced fashion design.



The other day, I saw a video clip of Mika Brzezinski and noticed that she was wearing what looked kind of like a "Ghana Must Go" shirt. I wonder if she knew it.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Book Discussion, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 2:00 PM, San Leandro Main Library

The Shelf: Adventures in Extreme Reading by Phyllis Rose

Phyllis Rose, a writer of literary analysis and criticism, decided to try an experiment. As she describes it in the first paragraph of The Shelf:

"...Believing that literary critics wrongly favor the famous and canonical—that is, writers chosen for us by others—I wanted to sample, more democratically, the actual ground of literature. So I chose a fiction shelf in the New York Society Library somewhat at random—it happens to be the LEQ-LES shelf—and set out to read my way through it, writing about the experience as I went. I had no reason to believe that the books would be worth the time I would spend on them. They could be dull, even lethally so. I was certain, however, that no one in the history of the world had read exactly this series of novels. That made the project exciting to me."

Among the books from the LEQ-LES shelf that Ms. Rose read and commented on were:

One for the Devil by Etienne Leroux
A Hero of Our Time by Mihail Lermontov
The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux
Call me Ishtar by Rhoda Lerman
Yes, My Darling Daughter by Margaret Leroy
Just Like Beauty by Lisa Lerner
Count Luna by Alexander Lernet-Holenia
Gil Blas by Alain-Rene Le Sage
The 13th Juror by John Lescroart
Spies of the Kaiser by William Le Queux

In all, Ms. Rose read about 30 novels. Come join us and let us know what you thought of her experiment.