Reading Diverse Voices by Bronwen Griffiths
Now, more than ever, we should support
diverse voices in literature. This is a personal selection of writers, Black,
Hispanic and Indigenous, that I have loved and plucked off my bookshelf, with a short introduction to each.
Books are in order of publishing date.
Ntozake
Shange, African-American playwright/poet
for colored
girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf, spell #7 (1978, 1982, 1992)
This is a collection of Shange’s performances and prose
poems – her themes can sometimes be uncomfortable (rape/abortion/white domination) and she also takes on the stereotypical images of blackness and black machismo - but always in marvellous, virtuoso
language. She was an early user of nonstandard
spellings and punctuation. Explaining her “lower-case letters, slashes, and
spelling,” Shange said that “poems where all the first letters are capitalized”
bore her; “also, I like the idea that letters dance. ... I need some visual
stimulation, so that reading becomes not just a passive act and more than an
intellectual activity, but demands rigorous participation.”
‘the sun wrapped me up swingin rose light
everywhere
The sky laid over me like a million
men
i waz cold/i waz burnin up/a child
& endlessly weaving garments for
the moon
wit my tears’
The Bone People, 1984
The Bone People
which won the Booker prize in 1985 was turned down by many publishing houses
before being published by a small press in New Zealand.
The book has been criticised for the violence
within it but Hulme
also presents a clear depiction of how love, violence and need are braided together
in a cycle of abuse and healing. A further
important theme is Hulme's Utopian vision of a possible unity between Maori and
Western culture in New Zealand. She spins together Maori and Western myth, together with the fierce reality of three people's lives.
‘Something touches her thigh. She spins round, viciously quick, her
palms rigid and ready as knives. The urchin has spouted by her side, asking
questions with all its fingers.'
Toni
Morrison, African-American writer
Beloved, 1987
Set in the mid 1800s, Morrison’s novel explores how slavery was institutionalized. This
process included not only devaluation and humiliation but also
‘de-identification’: the annihilation of the slaves’ identities through
arbitrary naming by the slave-owners which
broke down the personalities and identities of the individuals.
In Mari
Evans's 1984 book Black Women Writers, Morrison
states that the best art “is unquestionably political and irrevocably beautiful
at the same time”, - there is no question but that Morrison’s book achieves
this.
‘I guess
the hands made her think she could do it: get us both across the river. But the
mouth was what kept her from being scared. She said there ain’t nothing to go
by with whitepeople. You don’t know how they’ll jump. Say one thing, do another.’
Sandra
Cisneros, American writer with Latina roots - Woman Hollering Creek, 1991
A collection of short stories which reflect Cisneros's experience of America while still bound
to her Mexican heritage. The stories focus on the social role of women, and
their relationships with the men and other women in their lives. Cisneros also explores themes of alienation and
displacement, and individualism versus cultural tradition.
‘Never marry a Mexican, my ma said once and always. She said
this because of my father. She said this though she was Mexican too. But she
was born here in the U.S., and he was born there, and it’s not the same, you know.’
Helon Habila,
Nigerian writer, now lives in USA.
Measuring Time, 2007
Measuring
Time is the story of a village from its conversion to Christianity by white
missionaries, through periods of political machinations and power struggles, to
the present day.
Habila’s
work is ambitious in its scope and the themes it tackles: politics, corruption,
colonialism, coming-of-age, education, history and love. His characterisation
is strong and vivid, as is his evocation of both the landscapes of Nigeria, and
the often fragile atmosphere when peace can tip over suddenly into violence.
‘At
the foot of the hills was the village burial ground, with its headstones and
crude wooden crosses looking as if they had sprouted from the clayey red earth.
This had been the village burial ground for generations’ new graves straddled
older graves, new bones mixed promiscuously with ancient ones.’
Abu Bakr Khaaal, Eritrean, currently resides in
Denmark, African Titanics, (translated from Arabic by Charis Bredin) 2014, Darf
A poignant and beautiful short
novel about the lives of a group of African migrants travelling through the
desert and ending in the cruel seas at Europe’s doorstep. The story never shies
away from showing us the death and suffering of migrants without ever
sacrificing their humanity.
‘The moon, hanging over
the edges of my vision, enchanted me. Even when dying of thirst, you cannot
help being captivated by the moon, absorbing its dazzling glow and longing for
it to be the last thing you see.’
Bronwen Griffiths is the author of two novels and two collections of flash fiction. Her flash fiction has been published on-line and in a number of anthologies.
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