The Interpreters (novel)

First edition (publ. Andre Deutsch)

The Interpreters is a novel by Wole Soyinka, first published in London in 1965 and later republished as part of the influential African Writers Series. It is the first and one of the only two novels written by Soyinka who is principally known as a playwright. The novel was written in English and later translated into a number of languages.

Plot

The novel is set in the 1960s, in post-independence and pre-civil war Nigeria, mainly in Lagos. There five main characters in the novel, the foreign ministry clerk Egbo, the university professor Bandele, the journalist Sagoe, the engineer turned sculptor Sekoni, and the artist Kola. They were friends at high school, then went abroad to study, and returned to start middle-class jobs in Nigeria.[1]

Style

The narrative of The Interpreters is seemingly chaotic, with Soyinka constantly returning to the past events, and some effort is needed for reconstruction of even the main characters, especially Egbo and Sagoe. Many other characters (university professors, editor board of the newspaper Sagoe is working in) are given schematically, fully conforming to the stereotypes. This is because the novel was published in the 1960s, shortly after many of the African states became independent, and in fact Soyinka tried to build his narrative in order to break up with the stereotypes, expected from a post-colonial novel.[2]

References

  1. Gillard, Garry (2011). "The Interpreters". Murdoch University. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
  2. Dellal, Mohamed. "The Interpreters' Cultural Politics, Or Soyinka's Postcolonial Otherness". Postcolonialweb. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
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