Uses
of the Collection
The general public is invited to consult KU’s
digital collection of Onitsha materials, and it is hoped that scholars
will find materials
to enhance their teaching and research. The use of the collection by
members of the KU community is facilitated by the presence of the African
Studies Resource Center at KU, directed by John Janzen. In the classroom,
the recurring subject of love and marriage in the market literature
enlivens course activities that deal with these themes and related
popular culture issues. Historians, literary critics, anthropologists,
sociologists, geographers, political scientists and psychologists--among
others--will find benefits from the digital collection.
The pamphlets reflect the social ferment surrounding
life in Onitsha, an historical site of commerce and proselytizing
on the banks of the
Niger River that had "always attracted the exceptional, the colorful
and the bizarre," according to Chinua Achebe.1 Onitsha
also has a reputation, according to a October 2002 article in the New
York
Times, "as
one of Nigeria’s most violent cities, where criminals and traders
fight each other for supremacy on the streets."2 This
violence was portrayed in the pulp fiction emanating from the Onitsha
market.
Today, Onitsha is the center of a prolific film industry that produces
low-budget potboilers for African audiences based on the market pamphlets
of the previous generation.3 Thus,
audiences in women’s
studies, urban studies, theatre and film, religious studies, and business
schools
would undoubtedly find material in the collection to be of interest.
- Chinua Achebe in the forward to Emmanuel Obiechina, An African
Popular Literature: A Study of Onitsha Market Pamphlets (Cambridge,
1973), ix.
- Norimitsu Onishi, “Nigerian
Militias Wield Power Through Intimidation,” The
New York Times, 6 October 2002.
- John Strausbaugh, “High
Life and Mad English,” New
Yorker Press,
14, 48 (24 November – 4 December 2001) quoting Kurt Thometz, author of Life Turns Man.
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