What would you say is the defining character of The Third Wave of
Nigeria Poets?
We have to be careful at this point. If there were no defining
characteristics there will be no need for the differentiation in the
first instance. And such dissociative markers do not lend themselves to
very neat summaries; because they are several. So we may peep at their
watermarks.
In the area of language, we can see that The Third Wave Poets are
more effervescent in their use of words than the earlier poets. And that
is simply at the surface level of expressions which also appear to have
a more global spicing or flavour. We shall need examples which your
space may not accommodate.
But, there is also a caveat to this. Whereas, Okigbo, Soyinka and say
the Second Wave Osundare deploy terms with more learnedness or
gravitas; Uche Nduka or Amatoristero Ede can use registers with greater
lightness, frolic and play – in the contemporary arena. And which a more
cosmopolitan audience can relate to or recognize. At the socio-
cultural plank; The Third Wave Poets do not appear prepossessed with any
agenda to project their works as ‘culture – carriers’ in the sense
which Ibe Nwoga; advanced for sensitive and successful art!
The Africanness of Okigbo, Clark and Okara – inspired and propelled
their art – as almost independent elements by themselves. But you do not
witness the preponderance of such afflatus among our current poets. And
that is where you easily also see exceptions which you asked after in
your next question. It is a categorical but not a rigid assertion.
Because you have cultural lei motifs in say Promise Okekwe, Olu Oguibe,
‘Sola Osofisan and Izzia Ahmad; but not in the chromatic surplus
witnessed in Okigbo, Tanure Ojaide, or even the tenuous Ossie Enekwe
that comprise the other waves.
We require an excerpt from the work to meet a logical encore of these
assertions.
“Pain. Anger. Protest. These are the dominating moods of The Third
Wave of Nigeria Poets. Even the mildest mannered among them are capable
of hot words! The literature of the African Continent appeared destined
for revolutionary themes ….
The Second Wave Poets spear-headed by Niyi Osundare were confronting
inequities in the home land with condign metaphors of disgust,
remonstrance and renunciation. In The Third Wave of Nigeria Poets a
tectonic shift occurs. And that is the subject of our reflections. The
entire poets of Gardeners of Dreams manifest Pain. Anger. Protest: in
ways that are new to Nigeria Literature in terms of the degree of their
outrage, the content of their diatribe and especially the weapons
deployed for their assaults! Plus a rather funny dimension – the texture
in the characterization of their adversaries!
Unfortunately, politicians and soldiers do not read poems: otherwise
the whole scale looting and corruption going on in the country would
have decreased when our rulers encounter the metaphors by which our
poets describe them in pitiable kinship with pigs, hyenas, wolves,
tigers, cobras, vampires and every species of ugliness and greed in the
animal kingdom.
That has been the main distinction of Gardeners of Dreams. Their
spectacular contribution to our national discourse is their successful
dehumanization of our adversaries to the level of mindless beasts! ….
But with the advent of Gardeners of Dreams you begin for the first
time in our reckoning, to have writers who from exceeding pain, anger
and protest consistently ascribe to their antagonists the sub-human
attributes of wild life!
After more than 40 years when Nigeria’s rulers have refused
refinement, deployed progress and betrayed her citizens in every aspect
of civilization; the current poets now shop for their metaphors from
wild life. Images deployed on the leadership of these days are more
bestial. So whereas, the antagonists of the era of Soyinka, Echeruo,
Okara and Clark came from the same taxonomy: the soldier – rulers and
politician predators of Gardeners of Dreams are trans-species; and have
become hyenas, gorillas, tigers, cobras, dogs and pigs! As Esiaba Irobi
himself concludes with a more ennobling apostrophe to the poet-persona:
I am the sparrow in the meadow
These landscapes I paint are the terrains of a mind disfigured by pain.
It gives us an inkling of some of the defining characteristic of The
Third Wave Poets against the earlier practioners in our land. You may
need to encounter the actual texts for exhaustive enjoyment of the
expositions offered in the historic series.
Are there exceptions to this poetic age?
After dwelling on this subject for the past 16 years, I have not
discovered any exceptions to the categories enounced. No human
performance is perfect. None. But I will also wish to see where
exceptions can be adduced. It will be interesting. But given the rigours
and meiotic industry of the process; I doubt the prospectus of spotting
stray pigeons in the canon.
What would you say differentiate the poetry of the third wave from
the poetry of the first and second generations?
I believe I have already given some copious instances in the
preceding answers. I do not intend to pre-empt the affects of more
curious and ambitious readers who intend to encounter the published
works.
Could you illustrate with examples?
Really and truly, the verse of Remi Raji, is not Mona Lisa, nor Ben
Enweonwu’s Tutu; the poems of Obi Nwakanma, Toyin Adewale Gabriel, and
say Chiedu Ezeanah are not like Okigbo’s Watermaid, or Soyinka’s Her Joy
Is Wild … but their works represent a particular if specular form of
art and our own ‘newness’ in the creative pantheon.
Like T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound alerted America and Europe to the
emergence of the symbolist writers; that the new poetry need not
superannuate Shakespeare or the Magdalenian Cave Man; in order to be
valid; I urge our readers to welcome the works with cultivated sincerity
and goodwill.
You can be sure that the critical rigours of dissociation,
discernment and evaluation have been applied to these expositions, as to
warrant the continuation of the selection and sanctification ethic.
For despite the stones and insults hauled at Manet, Monet, Edgar Degas,
Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin at the emergence of Impressionism; a
time came when Europe finally awoke to the fact that a new form of art
is on pirouette in their cultural firmament.
Like all human societies, this is Nigeria’s moment to progress,
inspect and assimilate the creative energies twirling among her citizens
– after more than Fifty Years of Independence. Our Universities,
Examinations Boards, and other academic institutions and colleges across
the country, have a fresh pool of data and body of work to connect and
interact with: in a fluid and changing aesthetic, cultural and
technological lives of our nation state.
There is something about the illustrations of the books. You used
pictures of persons from different fields of life including beauty
queens, politicians and sports men and women in the same way that you
used pictures of writers and visual artists to illustrate a series on
poetry. What do you intend to achieve by this?
I commend the sincerity over your strong reservations on this score.
But there are varying perspectives to these issues. During the writing
of the series; I had my mind set upon Will And Emil Durant’s The Story
Of Civilizationand deep familiarity with Bernard Meyer’s solemn tome:
Art And Civilization. There is no single photograph in any and or / all
the historic series that was not directly referenced or alluded to in
the main text. So be it the pictures of beauty queens or Palmwine
tapers; every illustration was conveying a storyline.
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