VIDEO: The Baptism of Liberty - African Digital Art: Pushing Digital Boundaries

The Baptism of Liberty by Falling Whistles [Video]

An LA (Los Angeles) based Organisation “Falling Whistles” has been campaigning for peace and rehabilitation of  child solders in The Democratic Republic of Congo. Their new campaign “The Baptism of Liberty” gives attention to Congo which is having a historic election. Ensuring that this election is free and fair will be crucial towards peace for the people of this conflict-torn region. The video asks viewers to get involved and sign the petition for a Special Envoy to ensure Free and Fair Elections. Since Congo’s Independence in the 1960′s they held only had 2 legitimate elections. “The Baptism of Liberty”  is a strong visual narrative pushing beyond great design and strong concept, it’s a great emotional piece that urges us to get involved in a campaign for the peace of Congo!  

About The Author

 

PUB: UUCA Women Writers Group | Atlanta, GA, UUCA Women's Writers Group

TWW (Talented Women Writers) Seeking...

 

A place to write • Time to write • An audience • Advice

 

Inspiration • Publication

 

 

Find what you’ve been searching for at ...

 

Friday, October 21 and Saturday October 22nd join us for a one-of-a-kind writing conference.

 

• • • •

 

Be inspired by Pearl Cleage, Our Keynote speaker 8 Workshops led by celebrated women authors including blogs, spiritual writings. Self-publishing workshop led by Ahmad Meradji of BookLogix Yoga and meditation session designed to fuel your creative energy

 

3 ways to Submit Your Work!

1) Submit your work to be published in the Getting in Touch with the Source anthology.

The themes of the conference are: Identity, Expression and Transformation. Deadline for Anthology submission is April 30, 2011

2) Have a one-on-one with a professional editor. Deadline for Editor Review submission is August 15th, 2011

3) A chance to perform your work for an audience. Deadline for Coffee House performance is August 30, 2011

 

• • • •

 

Friday night keynote - $30.00 2-Day event - $85.00 Saturday at the door - $100.00 Anthology submission - $20.00

www.booklogix.com

 

Tickets available at: UUCA - 1911 Cliff Valley Way, Atlanta 30329 Charis Books & More: 1189 Euclid Avenue, NE, Atlanta 30307

 

Phoenix & Dragon Bookstore: 5531 Roswell Road, NE Atlanta, 30342 Visit www.uucawomenwriters.org for information and advance registration.

Financial assistance is available.Anthology

 

Submission Guidelines

 

Deadline for submission is April 30, 2011

 

We welcome original works if literary fiction, literary non-fiction, personal essay, poetry or prose. There is an additional $20.00 fee per anthology submission.

Getting in Touch with the Source anthology will be published by Booklogix and will be available at the Getting in Touch with the Source event. As a submitting and selected author, you will receive a complimentary copy. The selection process is at the discretion of the Getting in Touch with the Source editorial committee.

 

The Work:

•Your submission must be an original work of literary fiction, literary non- fiction, personal essay, poetry or prose

•The work must be related to one or all of the themes: Identity, Expression and or Transformation

•We welcome submissions from previously unpublished authors

•You may send only one submission of no more than 4,000 words. For poetry, no more than two pages total.

 

Editor Review

 

Deadline for Editor Review Submissions is August 15th, 2011

We welcome submissions from all authors currently working on a project which you feel is ready for an objective assessment.

 

The Work:

•Your submission must be an original work of literary fiction, literary, non- fiction poetry or prose

•You may send only one submission, totaling no more than 5000 words. For poetry, no more than 4 pages total

•Include a cover sheet with your name, address, email address, phone number, and one paragraph bio

•Once your piece has been received for Editor Review, you will be contacted about the time and location of your editor review meeting. The meetings are 15 minute sessions with an editor who has already reviewed your submitted work.

 

Coffee House Reading Saturday Evening, October 22

 

Deadline for Editor Review Submissions is August 30th, 2011

We welcome submissions from all authors with work that is suitable for performance.

 

The Work:

•Your submission must be an original work of literary fiction, literary, non- fiction poetry or prose

•You may send only one submission, totaling no more than 2000 words. For poetry, no more than 2 pages total

•Include a cover sheet with your name, address, email address, phone number, and one paragraph bio including any prior performance experience

•Coffee House Readers will have 5 minutes to perform

 

Tickets available at: UUCA - 1911 Cliff Valley Way, Atlanta 30329 Charis Books & More: 1189 Euclid Avenue, NE, Atlanta 30307

Phoenix & Dragon Bookstore: 5531 Roswell Road, NE Atlanta, 30342

 

Submissions should be emailed as attachments to kgmfoster@earthlink.net

www.booklogix.com

 

Visit www.uucawomenwriters.org for information and advance registration.


 

PUB: The University of Akron : Akron Poetry Prize

2010 Winner

Information

The Akron Series in Poetry was founded to bring to the public writers who speak in original and compelling voices. Each year, The University of Akron Press offers the Akron Poetry Prize, a competition open to all poets writing in English. The winning poet receives $1,500 and publication of his or her book. The final selection will be made by a nationally prominent poet. The final judge for 2011 is Natasha Sajé. Other manuscripts may also be considered for publication in the series.

Guidelines for Submission

1. Manuscripts must be typed and consecutively numbered, for a total length of at least 48 pages. Clear photocopies are acceptable. Please, do not send manuscripts bound or enclosed in covers.

2. Manuscripts must include a cover page (with author's name, address, phone number, and manuscript title), a title page (with no biographical information), and an acknowledgements page listing poems previously published in periodicals. Please do not submit manuscripts that have the author's name on each page. Manuscripts go to the final judge blind.

3. Manuscripts must be postmarked between May 1 and June 15 of each year. Simultaneous submissions are permitted, but The University of Akron Press must be notified immediately if the manuscript is accepted elsewhere.

4. An entry fee of $25 is required for each manuscript submission. Make check or money order payable to The University of Akron Press. The canceled check will serve as notification of receipt.

5. Contest results will be posted on our website www.uakron.edu/uapress/poetryprizewinner by September 30. No manuscripts can be returned.

6. Books accepted for the Akron Series in Poetry must exhibit three essential qualities: mastery of language, maturity of feeling, and complexity of thought. The University of Akron Press is committed to publishing poetry that, as Robert Frost said, "begins in delight and ends in wisdom." Intimate friends, relatives, current and former students of the final judge (students in an academic, degree-conferring program or its equivalent) are not eligible to enter the Akron Poetry Prize competition.

Send manuscripts to:

The Akron Poetry Prize
The University of Akron Press
120 E. Mill Street, Suite 415
Akron, OH 44308

2011 Final Judge

Natasha Sajé’s first book of poems, Red Under the Skin (Pittsburgh, 1994), was chosen from over 900 manuscripts to win the Agnes Lynch Starrett prize, and was later awarded the Towson State Prize in Literature. Her second collection of poems, Bend, was published by Tupelo Press in 2004 and awarded the Utah Book Award in Poetry. Sajé was born in Munich, Germany, in 1955 and grew up in New York City and Northern New Jersey. She earned a B.A. from the University of Virginia, an M.A. from Johns Hopkins, and a Ph.D. from the University of Maryland at College Park, for a study titled, "'Artful Artlessness': Reading the Coquette in the Novel, 1724-1913." Her honors include the Bannister Writer-in-Residence at Sweet Briar College, the Robert Winner and the Alice Fay di Castagnola Awards from the Poetry Society of America, the 2002 Campbell Corner Poetry Prize, a Fulbright Scholarship to Slovenia, a Camargo Fellowship in France, and grants from the states of Maryland and Utah; Sajé was a Maryland poet-in-the-schools 1989-1998. Her poems, reviews, and essays appear in many journals, including The Henry James Review; Kenyon Review; New Republic; Paris Review; Parnassus; Chelsea; Gettysburg Review; Legacy: Journal of American Women Writers; Ploughshares; Pool; and The Writer’s Chronicle. Sajé is a professor of English at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, where she administers the Weeks Poetry Series. She has been teaching in the Vermont College MFA in Writing Program since 1996.

 

PUB: Call for Chapter Abstracts - WHIRLWINDS Anthology: Emerging Communities of Sexual Minorities in Africa|Writers Afrika

Call for Chapter Abstracts -

WHIRLWINDS Anthology:

Emerging Communities of Sexual Minorities in Africa

 

Deadline: 31 May 2011

WHIRLWINDS: Emerging Communities of Sexual Minorities in Africa will be an anthology that will examine the ways that sexual minorities are organizing themselves in new ways to create groups, networks, organizations, and movements across sub-Saharan Africa. By sexual minorities, we understand not only lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex groups but also localized endogenous sexual minorities, such hungochani, gor jigeen, dan daudu, and infinitely many others.

Scholars, writers, and activists are invited to submit abstracts for chapters that will contribute to an upcoming book project entitled WHIRLWINDS: Emerging Communities of Sexual Minorities in Africa, edited by Mark Canavera and Charles Gueboguo.

Editors’ Biographies

MARK CANAVERA is a writer, humanitarian aid worker and activist who works primarily in West Africa. His humanitarian efforts focus on youth empowerment and child and family welfare in settings impacted by conflict such as former child soldier reintegration in northern Uganda, small arms control in Senegal, girls education promotion in Burkina Faso, and child welfare system reform in Côte d’Ivoire and Niger. Mark was a founding editor of the Harvard Africa Policy Journal and served on the editorial staff of the Harvard Journal of African American Public Policy. He writes features and op-ed pieces on African affairs and writes for The Huffington Post, America’s most widely read online newspaper. He received Harvard University’s prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Award for Public Service in 2008 and the Best Feature Writing in 1996 from the South Carolina Press Association.

CHARLES GUEBOGUO is an African scholar and author whose has developed pioneering research around sexual identity in French-speaking West Africa. His first book, La Question homosexuelle en Afrique: le cas du Cameroun (The Issue of Homosexuality in Africa: The Case of Cameroon), published in 2006, was the first French-language book-length study of African homosexuality and the first of its kind published by an African scholar. It was followed in 2009 by Sida et homosexualité(s) en Afrique: Analyse des communications de prévention (AIDS and African homosexualities: An analysis of preventive communication strategies), a critical reflection on the lack of appropriate HIV-prevention communication strategies for sexual minorities. He recently co-edited a special edition of the Canadian Journal of African Studies, which presented cutting-edge research and perspectives on sexualities in Africa. He was the recipient of the 2007 Fraser Taylor Award of the Canadian Association of African Studies and the 2009 International Resource Network Africa Simon Nkoli Award in recognition of outstanding contributions in the study of sexuality in Africa.

Overview

WHIRLWINDS: Emerging Communities of Sexual Minorities in Africa will be an anthology that will examine the ways that sexual minorities are organizing themselves in new ways to create groups, networks, organizations, and movements across sub-Saharan Africa. By sexual minorities, we understand not only lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex groups but also localized endogenous sexual minorities, such hungochani, gor jigeen, dan daudu, and infinitely many others.

As the book will be primarily descriptive and analytic in nature, the chapter abstracts submitted should not take the form of personal narratives or descriptions of the activities of a single organization. Rather, they should provide a descriptive, critical analysis of groups, organizations, or movements. While remaining accessible to a wide readership, WHIRLWINDS will be grounded in empirical research and thorough investigation.

The book will bring together chapters about both country-level studies and transversal analyses of major themes or trends across countries.

The editors have identified the following countries as likely chapters in the book and are seeking submissions for chapter abstracts related to them:

* Cameroon
* Democratic Republic of Congo
* Nigeria
* Senegal
* Uganda
* Zimbabwe

Writers submitting chapter abstracts about the above countries should include the following in their abstracts: a basic overview of the way that groups, organizations, communities, and networks are emerging among sexual minorities in the country; a description of the methods that the writer will use to gather the relevant data (e.g., how will she or he write about the given topic with a sufficient and credible evidence base?); and key points of analysis about the current state of communities of sexual minorities in the countries. If writers would like to submit an abstract for a country not currently identified on the above list, notably in the Maghreb, she or he is welcome to do so.

Transversal themes for which the editors are seeking submissions include:

* HIV/AIDS and communities of sexual minorities
* The interplay of Western and African organizations
* The role of women’s groups and organizations in sexual minority movements
* Transgender issues
* Historical precursors to current-day movements, groups, or organizing efforts

Writers submitting thematic chapter abstracts should include the following in the abstracts: a brief presentation of the major issues to be considered in the chapter; a description of the data set (e.g., which countries, movements, or groups will be considered in the analysis) and of the methods that the writer will use to gather the relevant data; and key points of analysis that will be undertaken. If writers would like to submit a transversal theme that is not included in above list, she or he is welcome to do so.
Writer Profiles

Given the book’s analytic nature, the editors are seeking writers with strong skills in research, critical analysis, and argumentation. Writers with journalistic and activist backgrounds are welcome to submit chapter abstracts although they must clearly lay out how they will ground their analyses in rigorous research and investigation and how they will make links to the wider body of literature around sexual minorities in Africa.

Strong preference will be given to writers from African countries and research institutes although writers of any background are welcome to submit. As the book must present a common tone, writers whose abstracts are selected for the book project should expect to work closely with the editors to revise their chapters as the project progresses. At the current time, the editors cannot guarantee any payment for work related to this book.
Instructions for Submission

Chapter abstracts should be sent by May 31, 2011 to whirlwinds@rocketmail.com.

Chapter abstracts can be submitted in either English or French although French-language writers should know that the editors will seek to publish the book through an English-language press. (Both editors speak French and will work with French-language writers on translation.)

Abstracts should be no longer than one page long, and they should be accompanied by a brief biography of the author. Writers are welcome to revise former speeches and presentations for submission as chapter abstracts as long as they have not been previously published.

Potential writers should note that the language of the chapters should avoid jargon as the book will seek to present nuanced ideas in clear, straightforward language that will appeal to a broad readership beyond academia.

Contact Information:

For inquiries: whirlwinds@rocketmail.com

For submissions: whirlwinds@rocketmail.com

 

 

 

OP-ED: The Science of Why We Don't Believe Science > Mother Jones

The Science of Why

We Don't Believe Science

How our brains fool us on climate, creationism, and the vaccine-autism link.

 

"A MAN WITH A CONVICTION is a hard man to change. Tell him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts or figures and he questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point." So wrote the celebrated Stanford University psychologist Leon Festinger (PDF), in a passage that might have been referring to climate change denial—the persistent rejection, on the part of so many Americans today, of what we know about global warming and its human causes. But it was too early for that—this was the 1950s—and Festinger was actually describing a famous case study in psychology.

Festinger and several of his colleagues had infiltrated the Seekers, a small Chicago-area cult whose members thought they were communicating with aliens—including one, "Sananda," who they believed was the astral incarnation of Jesus Christ. The group was led by Dorothy Martin, a Dianetics devotee who transcribed the interstellar messages through automatic writing.

Through her, the aliens had given the precise date of an Earth-rending cataclysm: December 21, 1954. Some of Martin's followers quit their jobs and sold their property, expecting to be rescued by a flying saucer when the continent split asunder and a new sea swallowed much of the United States. The disciples even went so far as to remove brassieres and rip zippers out of their trousers—the metal, they believed, would pose a danger on the spacecraft.

Festinger and his team were with the cult when the prophecy failed. First, the "boys upstairs" (as the aliens were sometimes called) did not show up and rescue the Seekers. Then December 21 arrived without incident. It was the moment Festinger had been waiting for: How would people so emotionally invested in a belief system react, now that it had been soundly refuted?

At first, the group struggled for an explanation. But then rationalization set in. A new message arrived, announcing that they'd all been spared at the last minute. Festinger summarized the extraterrestrials' new pronouncement: "The little group, sitting all night long, had spread so much light that God had saved the world from destruction." Their willingness to believe in the prophecy had saved Earth from the prophecy!

From that day forward, the Seekers, previously shy of the press and indifferent toward evangelizing, began to proselytize. "Their sense of urgency was enormous," wrote Festinger. The devastation of all they had believed had made them even more certain of their beliefs.

In the annals of denial, it doesn't get much more extreme than the Seekers. They lost their jobs, the press mocked them, and there were efforts to keep them away from impressionable young minds. But while Martin's space cult might lie at on the far end of the spectrum of human self-delusion, there's plenty to go around. And since Festinger's day, an array of new discoveries in psychology and neuroscience has further demonstrated how our preexisting beliefs, far more than any new facts, can skew our thoughts and even color what we consider our most dispassionate and logical conclusions. This tendency toward so-called "motivated reasoning" helps explain why we find groups so polarized over matters where the evidence is so unequivocal: climate change, vaccines, "death panels," the birthplace and religion of the president (PDF), and much else. It would seem that expecting people to be convinced by the facts flies in the face of, you know, the facts.

The theory of motivated reasoning builds on a key insight of modern neuroscience (PDF): Reasoning is actually suffused with emotion (or what researchers often call "affect"). Not only are the two inseparable, but our positive or negative feelings about people, things, and ideas arise much more rapidly than our conscious thoughts, in a matter of milliseconds—fast enough to detect with an EEG device, but long before we're aware of it. That shouldn't be surprising: Evolution required us to react very quickly to stimuli in our environment. It's a "basic human survival skill," explains political scientist Arthur Lupia of the University of Michigan. We push threatening information away; we pull friendly information close. We apply fight-or-flight reflexes not only to predators, but to data itself.

We apply fight-or-flight reflexes not only to predators, but to data itself.

We're not driven only by emotions, of course—we also reason, deliberate. But reasoning comes later, works slower—and even then, it doesn't take place in an emotional vacuum. Rather, our quick-fire emotions can set us on a course of thinking that's highly biased, especially on topics we care a great deal about.

Consider a person who has heard about a scientific discovery that deeply challenges her belief in divine creation—a new hominid, say, that confirms our evolutionary origins. What happens next, explains political scientist Charles Taber of Stony Brook University, is a subconscious negative response to the new information—and that response, in turn, guides the type of memories and associations formed in the conscious mind. "They retrieve thoughts that are consistent with their previous beliefs," says Taber, "and that will lead them to build an argument and challenge what they're hearing."

In other words, when we think we're reasoning, we may instead be rationalizing. Or to use an analogy offered by University of Virginia psychologist Jonathan Haidt: We may think we're being scientists, but we're actually being lawyers (PDF). Our "reasoning" is a means to a predetermined end—winning our "case"—and is shot through with biases. They include "confirmation bias," in which we give greater heed to evidence and arguments that bolster our beliefs, and "disconfirmation bias," in which we expend disproportionate energy trying to debunk or refute views and arguments that we find uncongenial.

That's a lot of jargon, but we all understand these mechanisms when it comes to interpersonal relationships. If I don't want to believe that my spouse is being unfaithful, or that my child is a bully, I can go to great lengths to explain away behavior that seems obvious to everybody else—everybody who isn't too emotionally invested to accept it, anyway. That's not to suggest that we aren't also motivated to perceive the world accurately—we are. Or that we never change our minds—we do. It's just that we have other important goals besides accuracy—including identity affirmation and protecting one's sense of self—and often those make us highly resistant to changing our beliefs when the facts say we should.

Modern science originated from an attempt to weed out such subjective lapses—what that great 17th century theorist of the scientific method, Francis Bacon, dubbed the "idols of the mind." Even if individual researchers are prone to falling in love with their own theories, the broader processes of peer review and institutionalized skepticism are designed to ensure that, eventually, the best ideas prevail.

Scientific evidence is highly susceptible to misinterpretation. Giving ideologues scientific data that's relevant to their beliefs is like unleashing them in the motivated-reasoning equivalent of a candy store.

Our individual responses to the conclusions that science reaches, however, are quite another matter. Ironically, in part because researchers employ so much nuance and strive to disclose all remaining sources of uncertainty, scientific evidence is highly susceptible to selective reading and misinterpretation. Giving ideologues or partisans scientific data that's relevant to their beliefs is like unleashing them in the motivated-reasoning equivalent of a candy store.

Sure enough, a large number of psychological studies have shown that people respond to scientific or technical evidence in ways that justify their preexisting beliefs. In a classic 1979 experiment (PDF), pro- and anti-death penalty advocates were exposed to descriptions of two fake scientific studies: one supporting and one undermining the notion that capital punishment deters violent crime and, in particular, murder. They were also shown detailed methodological critiques of the fake studies—and in a scientific sense, neither study was stronger than the other. Yet in each case, advocates more heavily criticized the study whose conclusions disagreed with their own, while describing the study that was more ideologically congenial as more "convincing."

Since then, similar results have been found for how people respond to "evidence" about affirmative action, gun control, the accuracy of gay stereotypes, and much else. Even when study subjects are explicitly instructed to be unbiased and even-handed about the evidence, they often fail.

And it's not just that people twist or selectively read scientific evidence to support their preexisting views. According to research by Yale Law School professor Dan Kahan and his colleagues, people's deep-seated views about morality, and about the way society should be ordered, strongly predict whom they consider to be a legitimate scientific expert in the first place—and thus where they consider "scientific consensus" to lie on contested issues.

In Kahan's research (PDF), individuals are classified, based on their cultural values, as either "individualists" or "communitarians," and as either "hierarchical" or "egalitarian" in outlook. (Somewhat oversimplifying, you can think of hierarchical individualists as akin to conservative Republicans, and egalitarian communitarians as liberal Democrats.) In one study, subjects in the different groups were asked to help a close friend determine the risks associated with climate change, sequestering nuclear waste, or concealed carry laws: "The friend tells you that he or she is planning to read a book about the issue but would like to get your opinion on whether the author seems like a knowledgeable and trustworthy expert." A subject was then presented with the résumé of a fake expert "depicted as a member of the National Academy of Sciences who had earned a Ph.D. in a pertinent field from one elite university and who was now on the faculty of another." The subject was then shown a book excerpt by that "expert," in which the risk of the issue at hand was portrayed as high or low, well-founded or speculative. The results were stark: When the scientist's position stated that global warming is real and human-caused, for instance, only 23 percent of hierarchical individualists agreed the person was a "trustworthy and knowledgeable expert." Yet 88 percent of egalitarian communitarians accepted the same scientist's expertise. Similar divides were observed on whether nuclear waste can be safely stored underground and whether letting people carry guns deters crime. (The alliances did not always hold. In another study (PDF), hierarchs and communitarians were in favor of laws that would compel the mentally ill to accept treatment, whereas individualists and egalitarians were opposed.)

Head-on attempts to persuade can sometimes trigger a backfire effect, where people not only fail to change their minds when confronted with the facts—they may hold their wrong views more tenaciously than ever.

In other words, people rejected the validity of a scientific source because its conclusion contradicted their deeply held views—and thus the relative risks inherent in each scenario. A hierarchal individualist finds it difficult to believe that the things he prizes (commerce, industry, a man's freedom to possess a gun to defend his family) (PDF) could lead to outcomes deleterious to society. Whereas egalitarian communitarians tend to think that the free market causes harm, that patriarchal families mess up kids, and that people can't handle their guns. The study subjects weren't "anti-science"—not in their own minds, anyway. It's just that "science" was whatever they wanted it to be. "We've come to a misadventure, a bad situation where diverse citizens, who rely on diverse systems of cultural certification, are in conflict," says Kahan.

And that undercuts the standard notion that the way to persuade people is via evidence and argument. In fact, head-on attempts to persuade can sometimes trigger a backfire effect, where people not only fail to change their minds when confronted with the facts—they may hold their wrong views more tenaciously than ever.

Take, for instance, the question of whether Saddam Hussein possessed hidden weapons of mass destruction just before the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. When political scientists Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler showed subjects fake newspaper articles (PDF) in which this was first suggested (in a 2004 quote from President Bush) and then refuted (with the findings of the Bush-commissioned Iraq Survey Group report, which found no evidence of active WMD programs in pre-invasion Iraq), they found that conservatives were more likely than before to believe the claim. (The researchers also tested how liberals responded when shown that Bush did not actually "ban" embryonic stem-cell research. Liberals weren't particularly amenable to persuasion, either, but no backfire effect was observed.)

Another study gives some inkling of what may be going through people's minds when they resist persuasion. Northwestern University sociologist Monica Prasad and her colleagues wanted to test whether they could dislodge the notion that Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda were secretly collaborating among those most likely to believe it—Republican partisans from highly GOP-friendly counties. So the researchers set up a study (PDF) in which they discussed the topic with some of these Republicans in person. They would cite the findings of the 9/11 Commission, as well as a statement in which George W. Bush himself denied his administration had "said the 9/11 attacks were orchestrated between Saddam and Al Qaeda."

One study showed that not even Bush's own words could change the minds of Bush voters who believed there was an Iraq-Al Qaeda link.

As it turned out, not even Bush's own words could change the minds of these Bush voters—just 1 of the 49 partisans who originally believed the Iraq-Al Qaeda claim changed his or her mind. Far more common was resisting the correction in a variety of ways, either by coming up with counterarguments or by simply being unmovable:

Interviewer: [T]he September 11 Commission found no link between Saddam and 9/11, and this is what President Bush said. Do you have any comments on either of those?

Respondent: Well, I bet they say that the Commission didn't have any proof of it but I guess we still can have our opinions and feel that way even though they say that.

The same types of responses are already being documented on divisive topics facing the current administration. Take the "Ground Zero mosque." Using information from the political myth-busting site FactCheck.org, a team at Ohio State presented subjects (PDF) with a detailed rebuttal to the claim that "Feisal Abdul Rauf, the Imam backing the proposed Islamic cultural center and mosque, is a terrorist-sympathizer." Yet among those who were aware of the rumor and believed it, fewer than a third changed their minds.

A key question—and one that's difficult to answer—is how "irrational" all this is. On the one hand, it doesn't make sense to discard an entire belief system, built up over a lifetime, because of some new snippet of information. "It is quite possible to say, 'I reached this pro-capital-punishment decision based on real information that I arrived at over my life,'" explains Stanford social psychologist Jon Krosnick. Indeed, there's a sense in which science denial could be considered keenly "rational." In certain conservative communities, explains Yale's Kahan, "People who say, 'I think there's something to climate change,' that's going to mark them out as a certain kind of person, and their life is going to go less well."

This may help explain a curious pattern Nyhan and his colleagues found when they tried to test the fallacy (PDF) that President Obama is a Muslim. When a nonwhite researcher was administering their study, research subjects were amenable to changing their minds about the president's religion and updating incorrect views. But when only white researchers were present, GOP survey subjects in particular were more likely to believe the Obama Muslim myth than before. The subjects were using "social desirabililty" to tailor their beliefs (or stated beliefs, anyway) to whoever was listening.

Which leads us to the media. When people grow polarized over a body of evidence, or a resolvable matter of fact, the cause may be some form of biased reasoning, but they could also be receiving skewed information to begin with—or a complicated combination of both. In the Ground Zero mosque case, for instance, a follow-up study (PDF) showed that survey respondents who watched Fox News were more likely to believe the Rauf rumor and three related ones—and they believed them more strongly than non-Fox watchers.

Okay, so people gravitate toward information that confirms what they believe, and they select sources that deliver it. Same as it ever was, right? Maybe, but the problem is arguably growing more acute, given the way we now consume information—through the Facebook links of friends, or tweets that lack nuance or context, or "narrowcast" and often highly ideological media that have relatively small, like-minded audiences. Those basic human survival skills of ours, says Michigan's Arthur Lupia, are "not well-adapted to our information age."

A predictor of whether you accept the science of global warming? Whether you're a Republican or a Democrat.

If you wanted to show how and why fact is ditched in favor of motivated reasoning, you could find no better test case than climate change. After all, it's an issue where you have highly technical information on one hand and very strong beliefs on the other. And sure enough, one key predictor of whether you accept the science of global warming is whether you're a Republican or a Democrat. The two groups have been growing more divided in their views about the topic, even as the science becomes more unequivocal.

So perhaps it should come as no surprise that more education doesn't budge Republican views. On the contrary: In a 2008 Pew survey, for instance, only 19 percent of college-educated Republicans agreed that the planet is warming due to human actions, versus 31 percent of non-college educated Republicans. In other words, a higher education correlated with an increased likelihood of denying the science on the issue. Meanwhile, among Democrats and independents, more education correlated with greater acceptance of the science.

Other studies have shown a similar effect: Republicans who think they understand the global warming issue best are least concerned about it; and among Republicans and those with higher levels of distrust of science in general, learning more about the issue doesn't increase one's concern about it. What's going on here? Well, according to Charles Taber and Milton Lodge of Stony Brook, one insidious aspect of motivated reasoning is that political sophisticates are prone to be more biased than those who know less about the issues. "People who have a dislike of some policy—for example, abortion—if they're unsophisticated they can just reject it out of hand," says Lodge. "But if they're sophisticated, they can go one step further and start coming up with counterarguments." These individuals are just as emotionally driven and biased as the rest of us, but they're able to generate more and better reasons to explain why they're right—and so their minds become harder to change.

That may be why the selectively quoted emails of Climategate were so quickly and easily seized upon by partisans as evidence of scandal. Cherry-picking is precisely the sort of behavior you would expect motivated reasoners to engage in to bolster their views—and whatever you may think about Climategate, the emails were a rich trove of new information upon which to impose one's ideology.

Climategate had a substantial impact on public opinion, according to Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication. It contributed to an overall drop in public concern about climate change and a significant loss of trust in scientists. But—as we should expect by now—these declines were concentrated among particular groups of Americans: Republicans, conservatives, and those with "individualistic" values. Liberals and those with "egalitarian" values didn't lose much trust in climate science or scientists at all. "In some ways, Climategate was like a Rorschach test," Leiserowitz says, "with different groups interpreting ambiguous facts in very different ways."

Is there a case study of science denial that largely occupies the political left? Yes: the claim that childhood vaccines are causing an epidemic of autism.

So is there a case study of science denial that largely occupies the political left? Yes: the claim that childhood vaccines are causing an epidemic of autism. Its most famous proponents are an environmentalist (Robert F. Kennedy Jr.) and numerous Hollywood celebrities (most notably Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carrey). The Huffington Post gives a very large megaphone to denialists. And Seth Mnookin, author of the new book The Panic Virus, notes that if you want to find vaccine deniers, all you need to do is go hang out at Whole Foods.

Vaccine denial has all the hallmarks of a belief system that's not amenable to refutation. Over the past decade, the assertion that childhood vaccines are driving autism rates has been undermined by multiple epidemiological studies—as well as the simple fact that autism rates continue to rise, even though the alleged offending agent in vaccines (a mercury-based preservative called thimerosal) has long since been removed.

Yet the true believers persist—critiquing each new study that challenges their views, and even rallying to the defense of vaccine-autism researcher Andrew Wakefield, after his 1998 Lancet paper—which originated the current vaccine scare—was retracted and he subsequently lost his license (PDF) to practice medicine. But then, why should we be surprised? Vaccine deniers created their own partisan media, such as the website Age of Autism, that instantly blast out critiques and counterarguments whenever any new development casts further doubt on anti-vaccine views.

It all raises the question: Do left and right differ in any meaningful way when it comes to biases in processing information, or are we all equally susceptible?

There are some clear differences. Science denial today is considerably more prominent on the political right—once you survey climate and related environmental issues, anti-evolutionism, attacks on reproductive health science by the Christian right, and stem-cell and biomedical matters. More tellingly, anti-vaccine positions are virtually nonexistent among Democratic officeholders today—whereas anti-climate-science views are becoming monolithic among Republican elected officials.

Some researchers have suggested that there are psychological differences between the left and the right that might impact responses to new information—that conservatives are more rigid and authoritarian, and liberals more tolerant of ambiguity. Psychologist John Jost of New York University has further argued that conservatives are "system justifiers": They engage in motivated reasoning to defend the status quo.

This is a contested area, however, because as soon as one tries to psychoanalyze inherent political differences, a battery of counterarguments emerges: What about dogmatic and militant communists? What about how the parties have differed through history? After all, the most canonical case of ideologically driven science denial is probably the rejection of genetics in the Soviet Union, where researchers disagreeing with the anti-Mendelian scientist (and Stalin stooge) Trofim Lysenko were executed, and genetics itself was denounced as a "bourgeois" science and officially banned.

The upshot: All we can currently bank on is the fact that we all have blinders in some situations. The question then becomes: What can be done to counteract human nature itself?

We all have blinders in some situations. The question then becomes: What can be done to counteract human nature?

Given the power of our prior beliefs to skew how we respond to new information, one thing is becoming clear: If you want someone to accept new evidence, make sure to present it to them in a context that doesn't trigger a defensive, emotional reaction.

This theory is gaining traction in part because of Kahan's work at Yale. In one study, he and his colleagues packaged the basic science of climate change into fake newspaper articles bearing two very different headlines—"Scientific Panel Recommends Anti-Pollution Solution to Global Warming" and "Scientific Panel Recommends Nuclear Solution to Global Warming"—and then tested how citizens with different values responded. Sure enough, the latter framing made hierarchical individualists much more open to accepting the fact that humans are causing global warming. Kahan infers that the effect occurred because the science had been written into an alternative narrative that appealed to their pro-industry worldview.

You can follow the logic to its conclusion: Conservatives are more likely to embrace climate science if it comes to them via a business or religious leader, who can set the issue in the context of different values than those from which environmentalists or scientists often argue. Doing so is, effectively, to signal a détente in what Kahan has called a "culture war of fact." In other words, paradoxically, you don't lead with the facts in order to convince. You lead with the values—so as to give the facts a fighting chance.

 

CULTURE: Zora Neale Hurston’s Lost Decade > In These Times

Zora Neale Hurston’s

Lost Decade

The Harlem Renaissance writer’s obscure and impoverished final years are being rehabilitated.

By Eve Ottenberg

Zora Neale Hurston in 1938. (Photo: Library of Congress)

For Zora Neale Hurston the 1950s were years in which she struggled to survive. The story of her last 10 years might sound like a gloomy tale, but in Virginia Lynn Moylan’s Zora Neale Hurston’s Final Decade (University of Florida) this is not at all the case.

True, at age 60, Hurston — the author of the 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God who first made her mark in the Harlem Renaissance in the late 1920s — had to fight “to make ends meet” with the help of public assistance. At one point she worked as a maid on Miami Beach’s Rivo Alto Island.

But Hurston was still active and productive during her final years, and did not end up at the extreme of literary catastrophe (exemplified by Edgar Allen Poe, who died an alcoholic in a gutter), though in 1948 she was falsely accused of having molested a 10-year-old boy — a scandal that nearly drove her to suicide at the beginning of this last decade. (Her passport proved she was in Honduras at the time of the alleged crime.)

Though she would have been loath to admit it, Hurston suffered because she was black and a woman — two factors that stood in the way of her being able to publish her work. But despite repeated rejection, she kept writing, especially about her historical research on the Hebrew king Herod.

Since her death, Hurston’s reputation has received two major rehabilitations. The first was a 1975 Alice Walker essay in Ms. magazine, “In Search of Zora Neale Hurston,” and the second the 2005 TV movie version of Their Eyes Were Watching God, produced by Oprah Winfrey and starring Halle Berry. Now that Hurston’s place in the pantheon of American writers is secure, it is unsettling to see her in Zora Neale Hurston’s Final Decade, going hat-in-hand to publishers and employers at an age when she should have been enjoying her retirement and resting on her laurels.

Moylan, an educator and independent scholar, observes that universities all over the world had her books in their syllabi, yet none offered her a teaching position. So she became a substitute teacher at a local high school in Florida, wrote freelance articles for newspapers that paid sporadically and moved frequently due to poverty.

Hurston was in some ways a conservative. She fought with Richard Wright and fell out with her old friend Langston Hughes. Both conflicts concerned their leftist politics and sympathy to communism. As Moylan points out, Hurston was a devotee of the meritocratic philosophy of Booker T. Washington.

Hurston wanted her people to pull themselves up by their bootstraps. On the subject of blacks who emulate whites, she wrote in 1934: “Fawn as you will. Spend an eternity standing awe-struck, but until we have placed something upon his street corner that is our own, we are right back where we were when they filed our iron collars off.”

Hurston, the anthropologist and folklorist, who studied at Barnard with Franz Boas, Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead, never lost her focus on the uniqueness of African-American culture. She bucked the conventions of the black literary establishment and had her characters speak in black dialect.

Hurston was also a contrarian politically. She vocally opposed school desegregation and, as Moylan writes, “blamed the NAACP, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and the Brown decision for what she perceived as the ‘hate-filled, stinking mess’ in which southern blacks and whites found themselves.”

Yet years earlier, in 1945, Moylan writes that Hurston had criticized American foreign policy for supporting “democracy abroad while ‘subjugating the dark world completely’ through its sanctioning of Jim Crow at home.” Hurston must have known very well that Jim Crow had more to do with that “hate-filled, stinking mess” than the NAACP, but in the heat of journalistic combat could not admit that. Instead, she belittled the idea of a court order that would compel someone to associate with her who did not want to. She seems not to have considered the perspective of ordinary mortals, who might in fact need a court order to go to a better school.

Moylan argues that regarding education, Hurston was a black separatist, and devotes pages to defending Hurston’s diatribes against Brown v. The Board of Education. Though at first it may seem jarring, this is in fact one of the most nuanced sections of a much-needed book, one that illuminates the last, nearly destitute years of a great writer’s life, years previously cloaked in obscurity. These years have been “a period that might appear outwardly unprofitable,” Hurston wrote in a 1957 letter. “But … I have made phenomenal growth as a creative artist. … I am not materialistic… If I do happen to die without money, somebody will bury me, though I do not wish it to be that way.”

And on Jan. 28, 1960, Hurston died in the St. Lucie County Welfare Home.

 

REVIEW + INTERVIEW: Swallow A Novel By Sefi Atta

Sefi Atta
Written By: Nicole Parker-Jones—
It is the mid-1980s in Lagos and the government’s War Against Indiscipline and austerity measures are fully in operation. Tolani Ajao is a secretary working at Federal Community Bank. A succession of unfortunate events leads Tolani’s roommate and colleague, Rose, to consider drug trafficking as an alternative means of making a living. Tolani’s subsequent struggle with temptation forces her to reconsider her morality and that of her mother Arike’s, as she embarks on a turbulent journey of self-discovery. This sets the stage for chartered accountant and CPA turned literary talent Sefi Atta's uniquely narrated novel, Swallow.

 

Sefi Atta's first novel, Everything Good Will Come, won the Wole Soyinke Prize for Literature in Africa, andSwallow is also earning critical acclaim.

Read an excerpt from Swallow: A Novel below.

 

I had to leave the flat to clear my head. My mouth tasted of palm oil. I couldn’t swallow my condom; it was the size of my thumb and as hard as a bone. What used to be my throat was now a pipe, my intestines were a drain and my stomach had become an empty portmanteau. It was as though every possible emotion had charged at me and left me flattened. I didn’t have the will or the ability to care about myself anymore, even to feel sorry for myself, and it was just as well, because the physical challenges I had to face were all that mattered now.

 

Rose and I were to swallow condoms of cocaine. OC said pushing them up our vaginas or packing them in our luggage was out of the question; the risk was too high. He would give us further instructions when the time was right, take us to the airport, hand us tickets and spending money. Our passports and visas would be arranged meanwhile. We would assume new identities. We were both cashiers, working for a foreign trading company and going overseas for the first time. On vacation. We were to practice by swallowing condoms filled with garri. Margarine, groundnut oil or palm oil would help us get the condoms down. Tablets for constipation would also help. If we succeeded, OC would consider us for the journey. If we spoke a word about his plan, we would both disappear. We were tough enough to follow through; Lagos had made us that tough.

 

We had to watch what we ate, how often we moved our bowels, and avoid being constipated. For Rose, this was difficult. She did not eat regularly. Swallowing made her vomit, but she got her condom down slightly before it came up. Mine wouldn’t go past the back of my tongue, and still I vomited. I vomited when I tried to swallow, vomited after I’d spat up. I kept heaving. I finally lay on my mattress, exhausted and watched the water stains on the ceiling. My tears ran into my ears and blocked them. I sat up and went to the bathroom to wash my face with cold water. I tried again. First I rinsed the pellet, and then I oiled it with palm oil and slipped it into my mouth.

 

For more information, visit www.SefiAtta.com.

 

 

 

__________________________

 

Everything good comes

as Sefi Atta

 

Written by Adaure Achumba   

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In a Q&A session with Sefi Atta, NE gets some insight into her life, mind and book: what she thinks about being labeled a Feminist, growing up both Christian and Muslim, and Fela’s influence on her writing.

African literature is often riveted with poignant accounts of rich cultural and historical heritage and, likewise, the monstrosity of political strife and human rights abuse. For many years, albeit centuries, African storytellers have rendered tales of brevity, romance, tragedy, slavery and freedom. These manifested in rapturous folklores laced with intellectual dexterity have been told in the waning hours of the day against the backdrop of an African moonlit night. Several award winning writers have used this to their advantage and successfully transformed elements of oral tradition into world class literature.

Despite their achievements, few have yet to delve into the political stagnation of women in Africa's ultra patriarchal societies. The plight of the African woman is left desolate in the annals of history as Africans themselves continue to grapple with democracy and strive for social and economic freedom.

In recent years, however, some African writers of the feminine persuasion have begun, and persistently, to toggle on the ear lobes of the world. For those who care to listen, or read, as the case may be, these writers are commanding the attention of readers and literary societies across the globe. Their works are fast becoming a testament to the fact that Africa is a fertile ground, pregnant with stories and writers waiting for a chance to tell them.

One of such is Nigeria’s Sefi Atta. In her recent work titled ‘Everything Good Will Come’, a page turner, Atta dares to lend a voice to women within a sexist African society. Her book also serves a nostalgic reminder of how life used to be in old time Lagos - a bustling African metropolis, nestled along the south west coast of a politically unstable Nigeria.

Published in October 2004, Atta's highly acclaimed debut novel is a tale of two girls, neighbors, who fast become like sisters from being best friends. The narrator Enitan, and bi-racial Sheri, are sheltered in their affluent boarding schools and elite life along the lagoons of Lagos Island. Neither of which is able to protect or even prepare them for the harsh realities they are bound to face. As their stories progress they learn a legion of life’s lessons which eventually enables them to morph into wiser and stronger women.

Atta's book is not only witty and intense, it is sassy and brass, funny and sarcastic, as it is tear jerking. It puts the reader directly in the plot with the characters, and it is most enjoyable if you have been to the places, know about the things and bore witness to some of the events and happenings she writes about.

Nigerian Entertainment: What you are writing about now or publishing next and when will it be released?
Sefi Atta: I am working on my second novel, Swallow. It is about a Lagos woman who is recruited as a drug mule during the War Against Indiscipline years of the mid-1980s.

NE: What books are you reading or have you read recently? 
SA: Nurrudin Farah’s Links, Milan Kundera’s Identity and Toni Morrison’s Love.

NE: What are your all time favorite books and who is your favorite author? 
SA: I can read Camus’ L’etranger over and over. Grace Paley is my favorite writer. She has a unique voice.

 

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Sefi at a Reading in Abuja.- Photo by Jeremy Weate

 NE: Is that who you draw your influence from? 

 SA: How I wish! No, I just enjoy her short stories. Anyway, I have come to realize that I am more influenced by music and lyrics than I am by prose. In that respect Fela is probably the greatest influence on me. He was an amazing storyteller. I am always reluctant to talk about him because my husband, Gboyega, is a Ransome-Kuti and I know how much the family respects Fela’s memory, but I really did not begin to appreciate Fela’s genius until I began to write. His chronicles of Nigeria’s post-independence history are the most accessible to Nigerians. He was serious and at the same time playful.

NE: What led you into writing and how did you decide it's what you want to do? 
SA: I took a course in creative writing in 1995 while I was working as an accountant in New York. In 1997, my family moved to Mississippi and I could no longer work as an accountant so I began to write.

NE: Tell me what it was like for you growing up in Nigeria? 
SA: Wonderful. We lived off Queen’s Drive minutes away from Five Cowry Creek. We had dogs, geese and chickens running around our backyard and a vegetable patch that used to flood during the raining season. It was one adventure after the other and indoors we had a library of Jane Austen, Huck Finn and other books. I took the usual piano, ballet and tennis lessons that my friends were taking and did not excel in any. I couldn’t be bothered to practice. My father was a Moslem and my mother is a Christian, so on Fridays I had Quoranic lessons with a Syrian family that lived down the road, and on Sundays I went to church. I attended Corona School in Ikoyi and after school played with kids in my neighborhood and of course we fought too. We had gangs and went from house to house by bicycle. It was a regular childhood until my father died when I was eight. That was a difficult time. He was the head of the Civil Service and I found out that he had died from a newspaper headline. My family moved to another neighborhood by the Lagos Lagoon. The place was full of expats. Our neighbors were French and Austrian and their children didn’t speak English. We loved our new house though. Our garden led right into the lagoon and my mother had a speedboat. She would take us to a remote beach called Olomo Meta. It was great. She also began to travel overseas with us. You can imagine a Yoruba woman with five children in tow showing up at a bullfight in Seville or wherever. People just used to stare at us. My mother gave me that sense of being a citizen of the world. Roots and wings. She was very proud of Yoruba culture and embraced all cultures.

NE: Where did you attend school, live and how much of that makes/made for good writing material? 
SA: I was in Queen’s College from age 10 to 14 and then I went to Millfield, a prep school in England. I got my bachelor’s degree from Birmingham University in 1985 and my MFA from Antioch University, Los Angeles in 2001. Queen’s College shows up in Everything Good. The school was a writer’s dream. We were girls from different parts of Nigeria, from different backgrounds, sharing dormitories, all of us locked up in that enclave in Yaba. The stories that I have from QC are too sweet for words. I intend to write a novel based on my experiences there. I have written short stories set in England. I have also written short stories set in the United States, mostly in Mississippi where I now live. Mississippi is also a writer’s dream. All my experiences have been useful.

NE: What is your ultimate goal in life and with your work? 
SA: I am 42 and have come to accept that I am not in control. My mantra is ‘Thy will be done.’ I try to do the best work that I can and remind myself to be a better mother and person. That’s about it.

NE: Where do you see yourself in the future? 
SA: I keep having visions of a yellow house by the sea. God only knows what the image means but I know I am in that house, my hair is completely white, I am still writing and wherever life has taken me I am content.

NE: What future plans do you have for your career? Is writing your only career now? 
SA: I tried sticking to a plan for two years and I was miserable. I was submitting work to the right journals and all that. It was awful. I stopped enjoying writing and the quality of my work went downhill. Now, I am back to enjoying my work. My only plan is to continue to. I write the stories that I want to write, teach what I want to teach, when I want to teach. When opportunities come to travel for readings or conferences I take them if I want to. I prefer to be private about money, but I am in a unique position as a Nigerian writer because I do not depend on the publishing industry for my income. I am very grateful for that and it frees me creatively.

NE: What writers and works have you been compared with? Are those comparisons realistic and what do you say to people who compare you to other writers? 
SA: Buchi Emecheta, who was generous enough to blurb my novel. Purple Hibiscus and Ake. The comparisons are inevitable. I recognize them for what they are and if necessary I reject them. The more that Nigerians discover my work, the less they compare me to other writers.

NE: Any plans to go back to live in Nigeria? 
SA: Sure. Nigeria is home.

NE: What writers do you recommend or who amongst your writing peer should readers watch out for? 
SA: All the writers that I have read: Helon Habila, Chimamanda Adichie, Tade Ipadeola, Chris Abani, Chika Unigwe, Toyin Adewale, Akin Adesokan, Unoma Azuah and Lola Shoneyin. Lola Shoneyin was the first of my peers that I read and her work encouraged me to write. I hope I am not leaving anyone out.

NE: What advice do you have for aspiring writers, African writers most especially? 
SA: Read read read, write write write, and set your mind to Africa. I tell myself that every day. Fela sang those words and I did not understand them when I first heard them. I thought his message was too idealist, too Pan African and 60s. As a Nigerian writer published in the West I fully understand what he meant now. Publishers here will colonize your creative energy if you allow them. You might end up doing the native dance to please them. The ooga-booga. They will fit you into their nice little African slot and pat you on the head so long as you keep churning out the stories that they want to read. I am very serious about storytelling and respect our tradition, which dates back centuries, so I resist.

NE: How has living in the Diaspora helped with your writing career? 
SA: I would probably be an investment banker if I were living in Nigeria, and living overseas has helped me to get published. It has come at a price though. My stories published here are mostly about protagonists who are victims in some way. No one seems to want to publish my stories about privileged Nigerians. That tells me a lot about their preferences. Granted middleclass and elite Nigerians are a minority, but why are they so absent from our recent literature, except when they serve as a symbol of corruption? It is a shame. You only have to look at the bios of Nigerian writers published overseas to figure out that we have hardly suffered any oppression in our lives and yet our stories of oppression are so popular. I get emails from aspiring writers based in Nigeria. They are writing about ordinary everyday events in interesting ways.

NE: What ways do you think the literary/ publishing industry in Nigeria and Africa can improve and assist with the development of new talent? 
SA: By educating, informing writers and providing opportunities to publish. By insisting on standards. My Nigerian publishers, Farafina, are doing just that.

NE: How does family life play into your career as a writer? How do you joggle being a mother and a writer? 
SA: You should speak to my daughter, Temi. She would most likely say that I am a good mom and a great cook, but she is a kind girl and knows no other mother. She has eaten my jollof rice, pounded yam and okra and spaghetti Bolognese most of her life. She thinks these are the options.


Sefi Atta at a Jazzhole reading in Lagos. Photo by Tope Kogbe 

NE: What awards have you received and for what writings? 
SA: Last year I was awarded PEN International’s David TK Wong Prize for an unpublished story. In 2003, I won a prize from Red Hen Press for a published story--Red Hen Press publishes Los Angeles Review. In 2002, I won a prize from Zoetrope for another unpublished story. I have also won a couple of prizes from the BBC for plays and have been a finalist or short listed for Glimmer Train’s Very Short Fiction Award, Fish International Short Story Prize, South’s Million Writer’s Award, the BBC Short Story Competition and Commonwealth Short Story Competition. My novel Everything Good Will Come was a finalist for the Macmillan Writers Prize for Africa and the Independent Publishers Book Award. 

NE: When did you start writing the book Everything Good Will Come? What inspired you to write that and is it reflective of your own personal life in any way? 
SA: I wrote my first line in 1997. I had not read a story about a Nigerian woman like myself, born in the 1960s and living in Lagos. Mine is the first that I am aware of. The idea for the novel began with an image of the two girls, Enitan and Sheri, by the Lagos Lagoon and then I just discovered more and more about them as I wrote. I drew on my personal life to get an accurate sense of place. I wanted a realistic portrayal of Lagos. In my novel the city never overshadows the characters.

NE: Everything Good Will Come as I have read in various reviews is called African feminist literature. What do you say to that? Is that label 'feminist' positive or negative? 
SA: I now say so what if it is feminist? People keep asking me to own up to being a feminist writer. If I were ugly, would they ask if I write from an ugly person’s point of view? I’m tired of all that labeling.

NE: What does the main character Enitan Taiwo represent? Where did you draw elements for her character? 
SA: You can see where she gets her attitude. I am not as confrontational as Enitan though. I don’t have the energy. Enitan is like a lot of Nigerian women I know. She is intelligent, headstrong and yet vulnerable because she needs approval from the society. She is constantly trying to free herself from the ‘good girl good family’ yoke.

NE: Sheri's character is a very familiar one to Nigerians. There's an Ibo/Yoruba/Edo girl like her in many upwardly mobile neighborhoods. Why did you choose to use the 'tragic-mulatto' element for her character? 
SA: I did not. Nigeria does not have the same racial history as a country like the United States for instance so that would be inaccurate. Sheri does not even consider herself biracial. She is not confused about her identity and I know a few women like her. She is the equivalent of the blonde blue-eyed girl, the beauty ideal in Nigeria, whether or not we care to admit it. She was an interesting character to explore.

NE: The poignant illustration of relationship building, whether marital, social or professional is a mainstay throughout the book. The challenges faced by the characters reflect much of Nigerian society. What is your aim in writing about them and why did you use certain illustrations (e.g. Enitan and her father, Mrs. Taiwo's religion, her marriage, Sheri and her sugar-daddy husband etc)?
SA: I am always searching for dimension and a sense of perspective. My curiosity draws me in many directions and the trick is to stay in control of the story. All these characters and their interactions with one another make for a richer and more complex story.

NE: The later portion of your book dwells on Nigeria's political instability and social injustice. How important are these themes in your writing? 
SA: So long as there is political instability and social injustice my writing will reflect that. I do not set out to write about any themes though. My main characters take center stage but I just had to comment on their silence and apathy during the Abacha regime.

NE: Your life in Nigeria and the UK is a big influence in writing this book? I don't see any elements form life in America. Is that missing on purpose or is it subtly implied and how? 
SA: Yes, it is missing because Enitan did not live in America and I was not writing about myself.

NE: What does the title 'Everything Good Will Come' mean? What other titles did you consider? 
SA: My editor chose the title. It comes from a declaration that Enitan makes at the end of the novel: a daa, meaning it will be good. It is a Yoruba __expression, a blessing. The title still sounds strange to me but the one I had ‘A State of Silence’ was decidedly lame. I had worse titles that I cannot share.

NE: The book has been received well abroad. How has the reception been at home and what sorts of questions and reviews about the book have you gotten from home based journalists or women readers?
SA: The response in Nigeria has been amazing. The Nigerian edition was published in October last year and Farafina are ready for their second print run. I’m thrilled for them because they have been so supportive. I am also grateful that people back home are reading and enjoying my novel. Getting their attention means a lot to me. One of the highlights of my book tour was being the special guest at the Committee For Relevant Art’s Elder’s Forum. I was honored to be there. You should have seen me in my big sneakers doing my ‘lady dance’ with Fatai Rolling Dollar.

During my book tour I had a few anti-feminist critics and they got quite shrill, but I always had women who stood up and shouted them down. Only once did I have to defend myself when I’d had enough of alpha males castigating me. One or two reviewers have done that too. They are very angry about Enitan’s commentary on the sexism in Nigerian society. I have had to stop reading reviews like that because they only make me want to write an even more radical story.

I have also had reviewers--not home-based, because the Nigerian edition is slightly different--who have commented on my translations of Yoruba expressions in the US and UK editions. They say I wrote with a western audience in mind. Well, hell yeah. I want people in the West to read my work. I was in India last month and I want my work to be read there and throughout the East. My novel is about to be released in South Africa and I want people there to read it too. If I explain this or that about Nigeria I am just being helpful. Kundera writes whole paragraphs about history or the meanings and origins of words. He is very much aware of a world audience and I appreciate that. I translate Yoruba expressions to English because I would simply skip over passages written in any language that I don’t understand. So if five words in my book are compromised, I can live with that. The integrity of my story is still intact and Nigerians tell me that it is an authentic story that they can relate to. That’s exactly what I wanted. I have also had reviewers--not home-based, because the Nigerian edition is slightly different--who have commented on my translations of Yoruba expressions in the US and UK editions. They say I wrote with a western audience in mind. Well, hell yeah. I want people in the West to read my work. I was in India last month and I want my work to be read there and throughout the East. My novel is about to be released in South Africa and I want people there to read it too. If I explain this or that about Nigeria I am just being helpful. Kundera writes whole paragraphs about history or the meanings and origins of words. He is very much aware of a world audience and I appreciate that. I translate Yoruba expressions to English because I would simply skip over passages written in any language that I don’t understand. So if five words in my book are compromised, I can live with that. The integrity of my story is still intact and Nigerians tell me that it is an authentic story that they can relate to. That’s exactly what I wanted.

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To learn more about Sefi Atta and her writing visit her website www.sefiatta.com. Look out for her new book 'Swallow' in the Fall of 2006.(Igo Wordu contributed to this article)

>via: http://www.nigerianentertainment.com/frontpage/index.php?option=com_content&a...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HAITI: Haitians Always Make for Prize Winning Photography > The Beach Bum Chronicles

Haitians Always Make for

Prize Winning Photography

6 Comments and 26 Reactions
Carol Guzy, The Washington Post - January 14, 2010

Yesterday Pulitzer prize winners were named and, not surprisingly, many photo journalist and print journalist who covered post-quake Haiti were nominated. In the print journalism category, photo's of post-quake Haiti won big. The Washington Post photographers Carol Guzy, Nikki Kahn and Ricky Carioti all won the Pulitzer for Breaking News Photography based on pictures of the human suffering during the aftermath of the quake. 

 I've had a complex relationship with images, documentaries,and news coverage of Haiti since the quake. I remember how camera scanned over bodies lying in the streets after the quake with a voyeuristic sense of awe and trepidation in order to get the best shot in the aftermath. People, living and deceased, and rubble were given the same level of care and respect when news channels fought to present the most symbolic and heart-wrenching stories and images. As a Haitian person, it became unbearable to watch the news coverage because, with so many people unaccounted for in the aftermath, I was afraid to glimpse a familiar face in the rubble. The cameras had forgotten that these were people, too, who'd had friends, families, hopes, and dreams of their own.

Carol Guzy, The Washington Post - January 24, 2010

I understand the depth and scope of that disaster was unprecedented but there was nothing new about its coverage. For years,  the Western media has felt the need to remind us of Haiti's poverty, it's constant battle with man made and natural disasters, the differences between "them" and "us". NGOs harp on the "resilience" of Haitians to accomplish the overwhelming feat of survival against what they perceive as insurmountable odds and inhumane conditions. Zoom into the now standard picture of a poor Haitian child staring wide eyed into the camera, stone-faced,withered Haitian women, or "violent mob" of Haitian men protesting the latest injustice and the Haitian photo becomes an iconic representation of "third" world disorder and first world consciousness.

And, while it may be necessary sometimes to show unbelievers the reality on the ground and to stir emotion into those with deep pockets, the consistent lack of respect for the humanity of the people being photographed is an example of exploitation. Nowhere in the United States would a photographer feel entitled to capture the image of a woman or the elderly bathing after a disaster. There is an understanding that life should be valued and intimate moments should remain even more so in the face of  disaster or grief to preserve a semblance of normalcy. Thankfully, I have yet to see an image of Japan's dead under rubble. Unlike Haiti, Japan's Western identity has placed it out of the scope of the exotic, untamed, and unfamiliar.

What the Pulitzer photos and the post-quake coverage has solidified to me is that the mysticism and misconception that surrounds Haiti and its people allows for a disconnect that makes it hard for Westerners to view Haiti as anything but the "poorest nation in the Western hemisphere" or a constant charity case that they are entitled to capture, present, and exploit as they wish regardless of the wishes of its people. And, though some may  have sincerely sought to humanize Haitians in the eyes of millions, the constant coverage even now of bodies ashen by rubble, amputated limbs with no anesthesia, squalid IDP camps, and traumatized faces begging for food widens the disconnect, leaving Haiti frozen in memory as a ghastly production of epic and violent suffering. 

We can only accept so much devastation into our daily lives before it all becomes normalized in the larger story of human suffering, war, and disaster that has become a cornerstone of mankind. In order to move forward, Haitians deserve the opportunity to finally control their own narrative and shape their own image. The quake was, and will forever be, a defining moment in  Haitian history but the people deserves a chance to move out from under its literal and metaphorical rubble.

 

NIGERIA: Elections Success & Problems

Cleaner election

boost's Nigeria legitimacy

– and regional clout

Nigeria recently took a major stand in the conflict in Ivory Coast. The recent presidential election has given Nigeria far more credibility as a leader in West Africa.

 

By Drew Hinshaw, Correspondent / April 19, 2011

Dakar, Senegal

 

A new regional hegemony may have been born this week – Nigeria's.

Africa's most extravagant oil producer has long had the money, minerals, and raw demographics to dominate its region like a bull in what might otherwise be France's backyard or the People's Republic of China's shop.

The nation's 154 million people account for more than half of West Africa's population, and one-seventh of Africa's total head count. Its gross domestic product is growing as fast as any world economy left of China.

"Nigeria should be in a position to be a part of the G20," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told reporters in 2009, referring to the influential group of the world's 20 largest economies.

The only thing Africa's sleeping giant has lacked – or, at least, the main thing – is credibility. When, for example, President Obama made his first trip to Africa as president, he publicly snubbed Nigeria to visit famously democratic Ghana, a fellow ex-British colony with a tenth of Nigeria's population and an even smaller fraction of its oil.

Yet Nigeria's battered international reputation appears on the mend following Saturday's presidential election – Nigeria's only free and fair election since it moved away from military rule 12 years ago.

International observers judged the poll reasonably fair, a marked improvement on the 2007 vote that was universally denounced as an descent into election theater.

"This is such an important moment," said Alex Vines, Africa analyst for the London-based watchgroup Chatham House. "Nigeria now has the legitimacy behind it of an election that met minimal international standards. It's very promising. It will allow Nigeria to speak more authoritatively when there are significant governance challenges in place like Guinea-Bissau."

The country is already there.

Nigeria's now duly elected president, Goodluck Jonathan, has been vocal in support of Guinea-Bissau's military reform program. Leaders of the former Portuguese colony are trying to retool their military to pave roads and dig irrigation canals, instead of smuggle Colombian cocaine toward Europe.

More audaciously, Nigeria stuck its boot in the middle of what may have been Africa's most divisive conflict since the fall of apartheid: Ivory Coast.

When the former French West African colony's defeated incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo refused to concede last November's elections, South African dignitaries flew thousands of miles over French-speaking terrain they rarely visit to offer Gbagbo a Zimbabwe-style powersharing deal that repulsed West African leaders.

Nigeria responded by co-sponsoring a declaration of war on Laurent Gbagbo, dramatically staged at the United Nation Security Council – all in the middle of Nigeria's own election season, no less.

"If that's what Nigeria is doing when it's distracted by elections and inward-looking, it does show the country's potential for leadership," Mr. Vines said.

Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.

 

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Nigeria: Rage Against the Phantom Rigging Machine



You can tell CNN's Purefoy wasn't  parachuted in; dude has been covering Nigeria for awhile. Akin, over at Nigeria Talks, already went through the vote tally and could see the in numbers and patterns the North's enthusiasm and why it wasn't enough:
The highest number of voters came out in the North West region with 10,800,075 people representing a 53.75% turnout... When you look at the kind of turnouts across the states and especially in the North where the numbers were higher but hardly reflected in the same inclinations of the South, the voters might well be aggrieved if the numbers across the nation do not go their way when you consider their enthusiasm, their willingness and readiness to participate in electing a new leader.... but their patron never crossed the rivers to the south and so the fault lies with that party rather than the people. (more)
Way before Saturday's poll, Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege took a blood pressure reading up North: 

So the North is having a hissy fit. meh! But yesterday when we heard former Niger Delta militants came out of a meeting vowing to defend Goodluck Johnathan's mandate, it brought to mind one of Reuben Abati's columns from back in 2000 when the North was throwing another one of its tantrums, this time over sharia law. Abati went "tisuuuuuuuu", pointing out that everyone can get mad then  throwing down his classic "nobody in this country has a monopoly on madness" rant
In 2000, the Northern Jihadists want to fight the whole of the South. The battle ahead is important because it is one battle that they cannot win! By insisting on the Sharia, they are placing themselves on the firing line of Southern anger. For too long, too many forces have resisted a Sovereign National Conference, now, a national conference of guns seems inevitable! What I intend to say is that for the first time since 1966, the Jihadists will be confronted by a determined southern army: each locked in its ethnic identity but all of them united by the same objective: to teach the Northern trouble-makers a lesson once and for all. This would translate into a balance of terror. The point will then be made that nobody in this country has a monopoly on madness. Each time madness erupts in one part of the country and it is met by equal madness, sanity is bound to prevail: It is this balance of terror so-called that may well save Nigeria.