Skip to main content

Opening Reception: “Street Talk”: Pamphlet Literature of the Nigerian Marketplace

Mar
27
-
Add to calendar
Outlook
Google
iCal
Sterling Memorial Library
120 High Street, New Haven CT, 06511
Room The Nave

Please join us to celebrate the opening of “Street Talk”: Pamphlet Literature of the Nigerian Marketplace on view in the Hanke Gallery of Sterling Memorial Library. Onitsha Market Literature—named after a city east of the Niger River—emerged in the early 1950s. The popular pamphlet style soon spread to other centers throughout the then British colony of Nigeria. These ephemeral publications circulated widely throughout the busy marketplace, and writers intended them to be both educating and entertaining for the common people. The pamphlets in this exhibition contain the voices of an emerging nation as it welcomed independence from colonial rule, inspired by pan-African nationalism as it forged a new identity, but was confronted with years of civil war. The topics are wide-ranging: indigenous Nigerian folktales, political commentaries, academic treatments, everyday advice, and new literary experiments. Onitsha Market Literature provides a portrait—in text and image—of a dynamic period in Nigeria’s history. Curator Thobile Ndimande, PhD Student, Department of English, will provide a brief walkthrough of this exciting exhibition in Hanke Gallery, followed by light refreshments in the Memorabilia Room.

Speakers

Thobile Ndimande, PhD Student, Department of English