The Fort Worth Press - Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

USD -
AED 3.673032
AFN 63.999874
ALL 82.188061
AMD 367.469969
ANG 1.790403
AOA 917.502114
ARS 1485.750797
AUD 1.438342
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.700677
BAM 1.713044
BBD 2.014496
BDT 123.278913
BGN 1.69088
BHD 0.37695
BIF 2980
BMD 1
BND 1.293919
BOB 6.936993
BRL 5.147696
BSD 1.000241
BTN 95.361385
BWP 13.512022
BYN 2.897195
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011623
CAD 1.42139
CDF 2254.999702
CHF 0.805699
CLF 0.023578
CLP 927.960007
CNY 6.796397
CNH 6.795065
COP 3354.35
CRC 455.717933
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.890298
CZK 21.13095
DJF 177.719961
DKK 6.53578
DOP 58.850241
DZD 133.148855
EGP 48.807898
ERN 15
ETB 161.440289
EUR 0.874461
FJD 2.237701
FKP 0.748952
GBP 0.747265
GEL 2.635021
GGP 0.748952
GHS 11.395022
GIP 0.748952
GMD 73.500451
GNF 8777.565629
GTQ 7.632378
GYD 209.230931
HKD 7.842695
HNL 26.771888
HRK 6.587702
HTG 130.70573
HUF 309.189499
IDR 18009
ILS 2.997502
IMP 0.748952
INR 95.34565
IQD 1310.303752
IRR 1375699.999778
ISK 125.920175
JEP 0.748952
JMD 158.192536
JOD 0.708996
JPY 162.173498
KES 129.259395
KGS 87.450185
KHR 4007.471583
KMF 430.999907
KPW 900.00035
KRW 1530.150305
KWD 0.31014
KYD 0.833618
KZT 472.786673
LAK 22554.665569
LBP 89569.375895
LKR 335.020846
LRD 181.553015
LSL 16.229006
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.417482
MAD 9.364725
MDL 17.635002
MGA 4247.99534
MKD 53.887818
MMK 2099.754651
MNT 3582.367601
MOP 8.081198
MRU 39.920821
MUR 47.069721
MVR 15.459726
MWK 1734.073163
MXN 17.397487
MYR 4.085099
MZN 63.90951
NAD 16.228935
NGN 1369.669956
NIO 36.80412
NOK 9.80144
NPR 152.58057
NZD 1.75462
OMR 0.384504
PAB 1.00025
PEN 3.405914
PGK 4.395104
PHP 61.416502
PKR 278.084031
PLN 3.750451
PYG 6067.214967
QAR 3.65662
RON 4.573197
RSD 102.626982
RUB 77.00272
RWF 1465.860815
SAR 3.758462
SBD 8.058541
SCR 14.083251
SDG 600.501751
SEK 9.632565
SGD 1.292045
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.350031
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 571.628783
SRD 37.693024
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.458946
SVC 8.75167
SYP 110.532098
SZL 16.225519
THB 33.281499
TJS 9.252127
TMT 3.51
TND 2.958895
TOP 2.40776
TRY 46.814596
TTD 6.773144
TWD 32.013004
TZS 2625.002992
UAH 44.600495
UGX 3654.119862
UYU 40.237889
UZS 12047.717897
VES 638.90327
VND 26300
VUV 118.993979
WST 2.773187
XAF 574.541585
XAG 0.016142
XAU 0.000241
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802631
XDR 0.713221
XOF 574.53152
XPF 104.456434
YER 237.049873
ZAR 16.20656
ZMK 9001.197429
ZMW 18.429293
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.06

    +0.32%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    75.28

    -0.86%

  • NGG

    -0.2600

    82.59

    -0.31%

  • RBGPF

    -4.1100

    61.5

    -6.68%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    53.09

    -1.07%

  • RIO

    -0.8400

    93.58

    -0.9%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    22.23

    +0.36%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    37.39

    -0.03%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.11

    +0.84%

  • BCE

    -0.5500

    20.87

    -2.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    20.09

    +1.69%

  • AZN

    -4.9900

    190.16

    -2.62%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    61.46

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    13.08

    -0.54%

  • RELX

    0.3400

    32.27

    +1.05%

Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie / Photo: © AFP

Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Twelve years after her last novel, best-selling Nigerian author and feminist icon Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is making a highly anticipated return with "Dream Count".

Text size:

The story recounts the intertwined fates of four women from Nigeria who emigrate to the United States and then find out their lives do not work out as planned.

At its heart is Chiamaka, a writer who defies tradition and refuses the marriage upon which her affluent family back in Nigeria had placed so much hope.

Zikora, Chiamaka's friend, fulfils her dream of having a child. But the father does not marry her and bails out.

Chiamaka's cousin has a successful business career but then gives it all up to go back to university.

And there is Kadiatou, Chiamaka's housemaid and confidante, whose American dream is shattered when she is sexually assaulted by a guest at a luxury hotel.

"I'm interested in how much of a woman's dream is really hers, and how much is what society has told her to dream about," Adichie told AFP in Paris at the launch of the French edition of her book on March 27.

"I think that the world is still deeply oppressive to women. Women are judged more harshly for being selfish, for having ambition and for being unapologetic."

The four women initially think they know what they want from life and love, but doubts creep in when they start to fear they have missed opportunities and struggle with social pressures and racism.

Yet they continue to support each other.

"Women are socialised to think of each other as competition. And so when a woman makes the choice to really love and support another woman, it's an act of revolution. It's an act of pushing back at a patriarchal society," Adichie explained.

- Not 'a place to be pitied' -

Adichie's 2012 TED talk, "We Should All Be Feminists", propelled her into the mainstream.

It received millions of hits on YouTube and was sampled by Beyonce in the singer's hit "Flawless".

But she does not like her writing being pigeonholed.

"I don't think of myself as a 'feminist' writer," she insisted. "I think of myself as a writer. And I'm also a feminist."

"The problem with labels is that it can be very limiting," she continued. "We would then look at stories through only ideological lenses."

Instead Adichie thinks novels need to be messy and sometimes contradict opinions and beliefs.

"We're all full of contradictions," she smiled mischievously.

Another of her bugbears is the patronising Western stereotype of Africa, the "single story" of a continent plagued by poverty, conflicts, and diseases.

"There's still the tendency to look at Africa as a place to be pitied," she said.

"And I think it's very troubling because you cannot understand a place like Nigeria, for example, if you look at it only as a place to be pitied."

Nigeria is a major oil producer, has a thriving business culture, global pop stars and Nollywood -- Africa's answer to Hollywood.

- A way out of grief -

Not that everything is all rosy. Young Nigerians are leaving en masse, fleeing inflation and unemployment in search of a better future abroad.

That, in Adichie's view, is the fault of the present government, which "is not at all in any way focused on ordinary people's lives".

"I want to sit in judgment of the government, not in judgment of those who have dreams," she said.

Now 47, Adichie has seen her works translated into more than 50 languages and won a string of prestigious literary awards -– including the Orange Prize for "Half of a Yellow Sun" (2006) and the National Book Critics Circle Award for "Americanah" (2013).

But when she was pregnant with her first child, a daughter born in 2016, she was seized by crippling writer's block -- every wordsmith's nightmare.

It was the loss of her mother in 2021, only months after the death of her father, that broke the stalemate.

Out of her sorrow came "Dream Count".

"Only when I was almost done did I realise: 'My God, it's about my mother!'" she said in an interview with Britain's Guardian newspaper in February.

"I think my mother helped me," she told AFP. "I think she said: 'You know, I need to get my daughter writing again so that she doesn't go completely mad from grief.'"

She said this book is "very different from anything else I've done".

"This is the first novel that I've written as a mother. And this is the first I've written as an orphan," Adichie explained.

"It's made my writing different. Because I think when you look differently at the world, what you create becomes different."

M.McCoy--TFWP