13th July 2012
“Graceland” by Chris Abani
Chris Abani. Graceland. New York: St Martin's Press,
2005.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chris Abani was born in Nigeria. At age sixteen he published his
first novel, for which he suffered severe political persecution. He went into
exile in 1991, and has since lived in England and the United States. His last
book, Daphne's Lot, is a
collection of poetry for which he won a 2003 Lannan Literary Fellowship. He is
also the recipient of the PEN USA West Freedom to Write Award and the Prince
Claus Award. Abani lives and teaches in Los Angeles.
SUMMARY
Graceland is
a postcolonial novel set in the sprawling city of Lagos, Nigeria and narrates the story of
Elvis, a teenage Elvis impersonator hoping to make his way out of the ghetto.
Set in Maroko,
a sprawling and swampy, bustling colourful ghetto of Lagos. The story follows Elvis
Oke, a teenage school drop-out and Elvis impersonator who is determined to make
it as a professional dancer. He applies thick makeup which turns his black skin
white and wears a wig to transform himself into Elvis. However, he finds it hard
to make a living as an impersonator, so mainly performs in front of American
tourists to earn a few dollars.
As we read
on we learn of his dissatisfaction with his life, particularly- the loss of his
mother to cancer at an early age (which is told in flashbacks) and his father, Sunday’s
downward spiral into alcoholism and unemployment, as a result. We further learn
about Elvis’ tension with his ‘stepmother’, which is mostly down to Elvis’
broke state. As a result Elvis tries to peruse other jobs firstly as a labourer
on a building site, then as a male escort to rich locals and tourists, then
into drugs (as a cocaine packager) with his friend Redemption and even
unknowingly into organ trafficking.
Spoiler* The story ends with Elvis using Redemptions passport to leave Nigeria
for America: "Elvis stepped forward and spoke: 'Yes, this is
Redemption'" (321).
CHARACTERS
Sunday
Sunday is Elvis’s
alcoholic father. The father-son relationship between them is a love- hate
relationship, strained by the fact that Elvis is ashamed of his father’s
alcoholism and Sunday does not want a dancer as a son. When he finds Elvis
dancing, he exclaims: “Ah, my son de useless dancer!” (80). It maybe
interesting to further explore the tensions in Sunday and Elvis’ relationship.
Question:
When Elvis confronts his father about his drinking they have an emotional
conversation and Sunday tells him, “Everything for us fell apart when your
mother died.” Do you think this quote is inspired by the title of Chinua
Achebe’s classic novel about Nigeria’s transition to colonialism, Things Fall Apart?
Redemption
Redemption
is Elvis’ best friend; he has a lot of criminal connections and dealings, which
he inadvertently gets Elvis mixed –up in. It is Redemption that recognizes that
Elvis is not cut out to survive in Lagos, which is why he passes his passport
onto Elvis.
Question: Redemption says that the “States is de
place where dreams come true, not like dis Lagos dat betray your dreams.” How
does this statement define how Redemption and Elvis view America? Do they have
an idealistic view of America?
King of the Beggars
The King of Beggars appears as a
father-figure to Elvis. He takes Elvis under his wing, opening his eyes to new
experiences and ideas as well as guiding him away from a criminal lifestyle. He
is known as The King of Beggars because he begs, however his begging seems to
be a political statement. He also travels and plays music all over Nigeria. In
the end he is regarded as an iconic and revered figure.
Question:
Among Elvis’s acquaintances are the street hustling, Redemption and a self
proclaimed King of all Beggars, the “icon for freedom and spiritual truth.” Who
has Elvis’s best interests at heart? Whom does Elvis trust and why? Discuss the
many influences in Elvis’s life.
Oye
Oye is
Elvis’s no-nonsense grandmother. She is strong, caring and speaks in a Scottish
accent, an accent which she picked up from missionaries.
Beatrice
Beatrice is
Elvis’ mother who dies of cancer when he is very young. She loved Elvis Presley
and so named her son after him. She also loved writing recipes in her journal,
something which Elvis keeps to remember his mother. The recipes are scattered
throughout the book.
Question: What is the significance
of the recipes scattered throughout the text?
THEMES
Theme 1: Imported culture
The novel unfolds amidst a backdrop of lush reggae and highlife
music, Nigerian tradition and American movies. Elvis is particularly influenced
by the images of America he receives from American- Western films. The novel
seems to highlight the Globalization of a world where you can get easy access
to a lot of cultures. Elvis observes:
“Lagos did have its fair share of rich people and fancy neighbourhoods, though,
and since arriving he had found that one-third of the city seemed transplanted
from the rich suburbs of the west. The were beautiful brownstones set in well-
landscaped yards, sprawling Spanish-style haciendas in brilliant white and
ochre, elegant Frank Lloyd Wright-styled buildings and cars that were new and
foreign. Name it and Lagos had a copy of it, earning it the nickname “One
Copy.” (8)
Question: At the start of the novel Elvis Oke works as an
Elvis Presley impersonator where he is greeted by odd stares and given money to
stop dancing and singing. What is the influence of Elvis Presley on Elvis Oke’s
life? How is Elvis Presley symbolic of American dreams and culture? What is the
role of American culture in the novel? What is the significance of the title?
Where is Elvis Oke’s land of grace?
Theme 2: Colonialism vs. The Preservation of
Traditional Culture
Lagos is informed by colonial practices such as
Christianity, which was established long ago. This notion also brings up the
issue of the formation of culture and how it is viewed in relation to history.
There are Christian signposts in the text for example: Elvis’ mother and her
blue Bible, his father’s vials of holy water and Elvis is raped in a church. On
the other hand there are signs that indicate that the Nigerian community is
fighting a battle to preserve Nigerian customs, for example Elvis’ father takes
Elvis to kill a bird so that he can become a man and Elvis’s mother writes down
traditional Nigerian recipes. Elvis comments: “All these recipes, and
yet nobody he knew cooked from recipes. That was something actors did on
television and in the movies: white women with stiff clothes and crisp-looking
aprons and perfect hair who never sweated as they ran around doing housework
for the husbands they called "hon." (146)
Question: Why are recipes and ‘Kola Nut rituals’ included in the text?
Theme 3: Masks & identity
When Elvis impersonates Elvis Presley he
cakes his face in make-up to turn his black face white. He also tries wearing
lipstick and eye-liner but doesn’t dare go out in public with lip-stick for
fear of being beaten- up. His desire for makeup is much less to do with
sexuality but more of a desire for constructed, controlled external identity. While
wearing make-up he can transgress his existing identity and imagine new possibilities, new possibilities for transcending his
national and ethnic divisions and spaces: “What if
he had been born white, or even just American? Would his life be any different?
Stupid, he thought. If Redemption knew about this, he would say Elvis was
suffering from colonial mentality. He smiled. It spread across his face in fine
tendrils that grew wider as he laughed until his skin showed through. I look
like a hairless panda, he thought. Without understanding why, he began to cry
through the cracked face powder” (78)
Theme 4: Names
The book gives us the impression that in
Nigeria culture the name of a person is very important in dictating the
character of that person. This is made apparent when Elvis’ father, Sunday and
his uncle conspire to kill Elvis’s cousin in order to preserve their ‘good’
name.
The name given to a person is also very
important: Elvis is named after Elvis Presley; Redemption gives Elvis the
chance to redeem himself in America etc.
Question:
Abani’s choices of names define “a culture where your name was selected with
care by your family and given to you as a talisman.” Discuss the irony of the
names chosen for some of the characters –i.e. Elvis, Sunday, Comfort, King of
all Beggars, Innocent, and Redemption.
Theme 5:
Masculinity
According to Igbo culture Elvis is on the road to becoming a man
at the age of five when he is told to kill a bird. His father explains: “Today, Elvis, you are going to kill your
first eagle.” (18)/ “It is de first step into manhood for you. When you are
older, de next step is to kill a goat, and den from dere we begin your manhood
rites. But dis is de first step.” (19) Despite the steps toward manhood Elvis
is an insecure teenager. He hates his alcoholic father, Sunday and sees him as
the worst kind of man. Elvis’ father says to Elvis: “You don’t understand de difficulty of trying to be a man in dis
society. So many expectations, so much pressure. You will see.” (186)
Theme 6:
Graceland as a Bildungsroman
The
novel is not a typical bildungsroman as it is not linear but back and forth, as
time shifts between present and past. However, most of the novel is written
through Elvis’ first person narration (and some chapters through the
third-person omniscient narrator focalized through either Sunday, etc.) Though
Elvis certainly does age and change, the transformation is not fully realized.
Instead it is suggested that he leaves for America, where the true coming-of-age
will take place.
Question: What other
themes do you think are prevalent in the novel?
Further Reading
Irele,
F. Abiola. The Cambridge
Companion to the African Novel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
James, David. The Legacies of Modernism:
Historicising Postwar and Contemporary Fiction. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2011.
Mwangi,
Evan Maina. Africa Writes Back to Self. New York: State
University of New York Press, 2009.
Sussler, Betsy. Chris Abani,
Colm Tóibín. “Chris Abani and Colm Tóibín in Conversation: April 28, PEN World
Voices at KGB” no. 96 (Summer 2006), 30-35.
The Pictures Generation in the 1980s:
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/pcgn/hd_pcgn.htm#ixzz1LGOA4ZQ7
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/pcgn/hd_pcgn.htm#ixzz1LGOA4ZQ7
No comments:
Post a Comment