Mabanckou review
Laila Lalami Alain Mabanckou’s Broken Glass in The National
鈥淚n Africa, when an old person dies, a library burns.鈥
When the Malian writer and ethnologist Amadou Hamp芒t茅 B芒 uttered these words at a Unesco assembly in 1960, he was attempting to draw attention to Africa鈥檚 tradition of oral storytelling. Little did he know that his aphorism would turn into one of the most persistent clich茅s about the continent, one that unfortunately reinforced the erroneous idea that there was no tradition of written literature in Africa prior to European colonialism. Early on in Alain Mabanckou鈥檚 new novel Broken Glass (to be published this month in translation from French to English), the proprietor of a seedy bar in Brazzaville, who is referred to only as Stubborn Snail, hears the slogan and derisively responds that it 鈥渄epends which old person, don鈥檛 talk crap, I only trust what鈥檚 written down.鈥

Leave a Reply