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Wole Soyinka

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“I would have gone mad years ago”, says Wole Soyinka

by Folarin Kehinde October 20, 2023
written by Folarin Kehinde

Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka has opened up on how he has been able to keep his sanity over the years.

Soyinka made this disclosure in an interview with Turkish journalist Aysegul Sert in Paris. Excerpts from the interview were published in an article published in a lit hub on October 19, 2023.

Asked what kept him young at 89, Soyinka said he had no idea but knew he should be slowing down, adding that each time he tried to slow down, something happened and he found himself getting on the trail again.

I have no idea,” he sighs. “I should be slowing down, I know, but each time I try to slow down something happens, and I have to get on the trail again,” the literary icon noted.

Soyinka also said he finds it difficult to turn his back on a situation and that each time he does that he loses that sense of inner tranquility.

“You see, I am deprived of that sense of inner tranquility once I turn my back on a situation. Quite frankly, I think it’s a flaw, because I am depriving myself of something which I know I need profoundly.

However, he said he had kept his sanity over the years by what he calls, “extracting myself from the world”. According to him, if he didn’t manage to have some quiet in his mind, he would have gone crazy years ago.

“It means depriving oneself of what one feels is pleasurable,” he explains. “You have to battle for your creative space, battle for it! Extract yourself whenever you can and be thankful for it, and just carry on waiting for the next opportunity to gratify your innermost instinct to disappear, and do not sacrifice it.

“If you can manage to balance the two [the activism and the writing] that’s OK, but if you find that you are being tortured internally then be quiet, just close the shop, run and go.

“I know it’s unbelievable but I really just prefer my peace of mind; I like to sink myself in a truly tranquil environment, which I find mostly in the forest … But, if between getting out of your house and getting into the forest you encounter something unacceptable on the way then that becomes a problem, and you cannot just enjoy what you really want until you have dealt with what you just saw.”

Asked again whether that meant he never intended to become a writer engagé, Soyinka said a resounding no, adding what matters to any writer is their honesty, the fact that they are presenting a different view and opening up possibilities.

“No! Never!” he replies, without skipping a beat. “I don’t know,” he shrugs. “One shouldn’t expect literature to be committed. It is sufficient that a writer opens up possibilities.

“The fact is that something is being presented, a different view is presented, that’s what matters. The writer must be honest, if you have a bad temperament—of confrontation, of poking your finger in the eye of power—then by all means do so but if you do not don’t feel useless, don’t feel like you are betraying literature. You are writing, that’s your mission, that’s your métier; exploit it in whatever direction it leads.”

October 20, 2023 0 comments
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Encomium as Wole Soyinka Celebrates 88 Birthday

by Folarin Kehinde July 13, 2022
written by Folarin Kehinde

Nigerian sage and literary genius Professor Wole Soyinka turns 88 today. He was born on the 13th of july 1934 in Abeokuta near Ibadan, old western Nigeria.

After his studies in government college Ibadan (now university of Ibadan) in 1954, he continued at the university of Leeds where in 1973 he took his doctorate. During the six years spent in England, he was a dramaturgist at the Royal Court Theatre in London 1958-1959.

In 1960, he was awarded a Rockefeller bursary and returned to Nigeria to study African drama. At the same time, he taught drama and literature at various universities in Ibadan, Lagos, and Ife, where, since 1975, he has been professor of comparative literature.

He is the author of many renowned plays including: swamp dwellers, the Lion and the Jewel, the trial of brother Jero etc. Soyinka has written two novels, The Interpreters (1965), narratively, a complicated work which has been compared to Joyce’s and Faulkner’s, in which six Nigerian intellectuals discuss and interpret their African experiences, and Season of Anomy (1973) which is based on the writer’s thoughts during his imprisonment and confronts the Orpheus and Euridice myth with the mythology of the Yoruba.

Purely autobiographical are The Man Died: Prison Notes (1972) and the account of his childhood, Aké ( 1981), in which the parents’ warmth and interest in their son are prominent. Literary essays are collected in, among others, Myth, Literature and the African World (1975).

in 1986, he won the coveted Nobel prize in Literature, becoming the first African to win the award.

Professor Soyinka is celebrated as a literacy genius, a pan-African and an avid campaigner for good governance. Many people including the Nobel association have taken to their social media accounts to celebrate the Nigerian writer on his 88th birthday

July 13, 2022 0 comments
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