Introduction
‘The African is corrupt through and through. They are all corrupt.’ So accustomed are we to racist stereotypes of Africa and Africans, there is almost nothing shocking about this statement.Footnote 1 Yet, one may misrecognize its provenance. Formulated in these exact terms, the statement is made in the context of Nigeria at the dawn of independence. It is spoken by Mr Green, Obi Okonkwo’s boss in Chinua Achebe’s second novel, No Longer at Ease (Reference Achebe1960). Green makes this racist remark after playing tennis ‘with a friend who worked for the British Council’ in the company of ‘many other Europeans’ in a bar that was formerly exclusive to Europeans and remains ‘technically’ so (ibid.: 3). Almost offhandedly, it is Mr Green’s British Council friend who prompts this remark when he claims that he ‘cannot understand why’ Obi Okonkwo would agree to ‘take a bribe’ given his status as ‘a young man of great promise’ who has a respectable ‘education’ from the UK at a time when few are so privileged (ibid.: 2). Mr Green’s damning response poses the question: how should we understand the regimes of corruption that were emerging in nascent postcolonial states in Africa and the role of the new African elites within these regimes of corruption?
According to Bill Ashcroft and colleagues (Reference Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffin1995: 2), one of the main challenges confronting postcolonial societies has been ‘the development of the new elites within independent societies’. This article examines elites and corruption in what I call, following Achille Mbembe, the early postcolony in Africa. ‘The postcolony,’ Mbembe writes, ‘identifies specifically a given historical trajectory – that of societies recently emerging from the experience of colonisation and the violence which the colonial relationship, par excellence, involves’ (Reference Mbembe1992: 3; see also Reference Mbembe2001: 201). As an anthropologist studying and working in Africa, my intellectual project so far has focused on ‘studying-up’ (Nader Reference Nader and Hymes1969) to examine how African elites negotiate the complex social and political relations of power that define their lives. Mbembe’s theoretical impulses have stimulated my work on elites in Cameroon (see, for example, Orock Reference Orock2014; Reference Orock2015). Here, I am particularly interested in this early African postcolony from the vantage point of two archives: anthropological accounts by way of conventional ethnographic stories and literary accounts by way of African fiction of the period. Parsing these two archives opens up interesting possibilities for considering how the literary account enriches and even supplants the stories told by (especially colonial expatriate) anthropologists of that early postcolony.
In both its ethnographic imagination and anthropological complexity, I argue, African literary production (especially African fiction and drama) defined, and in some measure prefigured, a theory of power in the postcolony as we have come to know it since Mbembe’s ‘Provisional notes’ essay and On the Postcolony, his subsequent, more definitive study on the theme. In the spirit of Mbembe’s own methodologically innovative approach, I propose to show here how the political anthropology of Achebe’s fiction is exemplary of a particular kind of literary description of the early postcolony.
In both Mbembe’s Reference Mbembe1992 essay and his Reference Mbembe2001 book On the Postcolony, the African novel constitutes an important source for ethnographic descriptions and/or comparisons – informants of sorts – through which he addresses the questions of sovereign power, corruption, waste and consumption in the postcolony. Chief among these are the works of Congolese novelist Sony Lab’ou Tansi and that early figure of Nigerian literary production Amos Tutuola. In ‘Provisional notes’, for example, Mbembe draws on Lab’ou Tansi’s descriptions of the ‘tropicalities of His Excellency’ as well as the roles of ‘the strong, thick, delivering thighs’ and ‘the essential, bewitching arse’ of girls in bringing about the ‘digital orgasms’ of leaders (Mbembe Reference Mbembe1992: 6). Such works of early African fiction have helped to animate Mbembe’s anthropological imagination, including in one of his latest books, Critique of Black Reason (Reference Mbembe2017).
Thus, imaginative literature from Africa has served as a fertile ground of inspiration for Mbembe’s socio-cultural critique and political analysis of elites and postcolonial power in Africa. Here, I examine two novels by Chinua Achebe: No Longer at Ease (Reference Achebe1960) and A Man of the People (Reference Achebe1966). These two novels grapple with the complexities of elite power and corruption in a nascent postcolonial Nigeria in the 1960s. My analysis is situated along the general orientation of a sociology and anthropology of art and literature (Albrecht etal. Reference Albrecht, Barnett and Griff1970; Eagleton Reference Eagleton1988) or more specifically what is now commonly viewed as a literary anthropology tout court (Nyamnjoh Reference Nyamnjoh2017a; Nic Craith and Fournier Reference Nic Craith and Fournier2016; Rapport Reference Rapport and Jackson2011; Reference Rapport and Wulff2016; Davies and Fardon Reference Davies and Fardon1991).
This literary anthropology examines not only the ways in which literature is shaped by and embedded in its social context in terms of its cultural origins and uses (aesthetic, political or otherwise), but also the ways in which literature, sociology and anthropology share similar styles and modes of socio-cultural interpretation of the human condition. This emerging field of literary anthropology ‘raises many exciting epistemological questions about literature as a resource for anthropologists’ (Nic Craith and Fournier Reference Nic Craith and Fournier2016: 7). I will therefore begin by discussing how literary production in Africa’s ‘new nations’ responded to the changing socio-political and cultural orders of the postcolony in ways that are highly enriching of anthropological representations of the era. I will then go on to discuss how the fiction of Chinua Achebe’s two novels, No Longer at Ease and A Man of the People, illustrates so well this literary engagement with the anthropological question of shifting dynamics of corruption, elite leadership and postcolonial power in the specific context of Nigeria.
Fiction, ethnography and the anthropology of the postcolony
Published by this journal in 1992, Mbembe’s article was both seminal and provocative for thinking about postcolonial power and its genealogies in colonial regimes of discipline. The central argument of that essay is well known. Like Michel Foucault, Mbembe recognized the role of the body and the violence meted upon it in the economy of discipline and death. However, in a provocative manner, he drew our attention to the materiality of the body in the constitution of (post)colonial sovereignty. Sovereign power was marked by an ‘obsession’ with the body’s orifices (mouth, vagina, anus) and the fluids and odours emanating from them, as well as its protuberances (the phallus, buttocks, breasts, stomach, and so on).
Focusing on the multiple investments in the body, Mbembe indicated some of the different modes by which these bodies are (ab)used, fed, made to dance, work, and so forth, so they may ‘tire out’ in the end. These postcolonial processes of disciplining bodies through pain and pleasure, he argued, generate multiple registers of complicity between authorities and people – so that, in the end, both become ‘disempowered’ (Mbembe Reference Mbembe1992: 8–9). Essentially, Mbembe insisted, sovereign power is as much about bringing death as it is about the possibilities of life and its enjoyment. That is, the orifices and protuberances of the body make possible an ‘orgiastic enjoyment of power’ or jouissance tout court (Mbembe Reference Mbembe2006). After all, he writes, ‘the body in question is firstly a body that eats and drinks, and secondly a body that is open – in both ways’, to take in and give out substances and vitalities (Mbembe Reference Mbembe1992: 7; cf. Warnier Reference Warnier2007). Similarly, following Foucault, Judith Butler (Reference Butler1997: 34, 53) has also written that a focus on ‘bodily subjection’ through ‘the immanent relation of pleasure and pain’ is important to the contextualization of the ‘psychic life of power’. For Mbembe, one way to undertake this contextualization is by emphasizing the multiple processes by which the banality of ‘corruption’ – (ab)uses – links both. As he puts it elsewhere, ‘the mutual corruption’ of bodies demands an account of both ‘the psychic life’ and the ‘sensorial life of power’ (see Mbembe Reference Mbembe2006).
Mbembe’s work does not dwell directly on the issue of corruption in relation to elite power in Africa, or at least not in the sense in which the term has been widely used – to refer to the specific issue of failed bureaucratic governance and its consequences in Africa – by sociologists, political scientists, anthropologists, and even historians. But his descriptions of the aesthetics of obscenity, through multiple cultural registers, emphasize the ‘violent pursuit of wrongdoing to the point of shamelessness’ and constitute the ‘baroque character of the postcolony’ (Mbembe Reference Mbembe1992: 14).Footnote 2 In this sense, I would like to suggest that Mbembe’s essay ‘Provisional notes on the postcolony’ – and the book that followed much later – offered a theoretically challenging and stimulating perspective on the overall character of the state. In particular, his critique underlines the ways in which the social and cultural workings of the (post)colonial state facilitate a culture of corruption (cf. Gupta Reference Gupta1995; Olivier de Sardan Reference Olivier de Sardan1999; Smith Reference Smith2007). Hence, this critique continues to inspire those working from several disciplinary perspectives within the social sciences and humanities. Yet, the appeal of Mbembe’s critique, even three decades later, also lies in its methodological orientation and commitment to an ethnographic imagination that privileges African cultural archives. Notably, he mobilizes the literary archive effectively to elucidate the dynamics of complicity and the ambiguities of domination, resistance and disempowerment in colonial and postcolonial orders.
Certainly, Mbembe was not the first historian or anthropologist of Africa to address the question of the state, elites and corruption. Others – including Jean-François Bayart, Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan, Stephen Ellis and Jean-Pierre Warnier – had begun addressing this and similar issues in their own work at about the same time or even earlier than Mbembe. However, as I discuss below, the critical analysis of literary sources constitutes one of the original aspects of Mbembe’s approach. My focus here is both on Mbembe’s valuable theoretical insights on postcolonial jouissance and on his methodological commitment to the African literary imagination, especially the African novel, as an important cultural archive from which to creatively engage with African lifeworlds.
Literary production arising out of those early years became increasingly critical in this regard in several parts of the continent. These literary works defined and expressed the hopes, aspirations and postcolonial disaffections and disillusionment that Africanist social science has largely left unaddressed (for exceptions, see, for example, Adebanwi Reference Adebanwi2014; Piot Reference Piot2010; Diamond Reference Diamond1989; Gugler Reference Gugler1988). Thus, African literature was trenchant in its critique of the new elite in Africa from the onset of the postcolonial experience. As Abiola Irele observes in an introduction to Femi Osofisan’s The Oriki of a Grasshopper and Other Plays, African literature emerging during this period adopted a very ‘critical observation’ of the changed ‘sociopolitical order and the conditions of a problematic modernity’ (Irele Reference Irele and Osofisan1995; see also Gugler Reference Gugler1988). As these new socio-political orders quickly became defined by personal rule and dictatorships under one-party state or military regimes (see Zolberg Reference Zolberg1966), African literary works consistently engaged with and represented the changing social structures and cultural practices associated with the politics of the new nations and the African elites at their helm.
In poetry, such critiques include Wole Soyinka’s A Dance of the Forests (Reference Soyinka1963), which was written specifically as a critique of celebrations of Nigeria’s independence. In African novels such as Les Bouts de Bois de Dieu: Banty Mam Yall (Reference Sembène1960),Footnote 3 Ousmane Sembène offered a representation of the new African bourgeoisie in Senegal and Mali. Similarly, in The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (Reference Armah1988 [1968]), set in newly independent Ghana, Ayi Kwei Armah adopts a scatological style to describe the complex landscapes of depravity, complicity and moral corruption that unite both elites and the masses (cf. Ajakah Reference Ajakah2018; Niemi Reference Niemi2017; Ogede Reference Ogede2000). In that novel, members of the political elite, like the lecherous Koomson, are represented through the imagery and metaphors of corruption, deformity, protuberances and odours that are the signs of postcolonial greed, decay and excrement: pot bellies, smelly latrines, consumption of high-end goods amidst widespread poverty and lack of necessities, and so on. This critique of postcolonial authority was also evinced in drama, for example in Ama Ata Aidoo’s The Dilemma of a Ghost (Reference Aidoo1965). The huge contribution of this literary archive to social and cultural critique and the interpretation of postcolonial society in Africa led the political theorist Patrick Chabal (Reference Chabal1992: 8) to conclude that African writers ‘did more to reveal the reality of postcolonial Africa than most African scholars’.
Thus, in its fullness, this literary archive conveys the contradictions, anxieties and uncertainties experienced by Africans as their countries marched along the so-called path to sovereignty and ‘modernity’. In short, in much more vivid, though fictional, ways, these literary works convey the contradictions and tensions of postcolonial modernity in these new African states (cf. Comaroff and Comaroff Reference Comaroff and Comaroff1993; Migraine-George Reference Migraine-George2003). Most notable is the emphasis on generational struggles between established elites educated in colonial metropolises in the 1930s and 1940s and younger men and women, some of whom were still trained abroad but who were increasingly educated in the newly established universities in African countries. These tensions and contradictions, so readily apparent in the two novels by Achebe that I discuss below through the theme of elites and corruption, are absent in the ethnographic representations of anthropologists working at that time. In this sense, Achebe’s novels are a useful resource for our efforts to define and elaborate a political anthropology and critique of power in the early postcolony.
So, for the purposes of this article, I discuss how Achebe’s works of fiction represent familiar tropes of corruption and postcolonial decadence in the postcolony. My goal is to take his fiction seriously in anthropological analysis. As noted above, anthropologists increasingly recognize the value of literature as a potential (re)source for anthropological knowledge, beyond conventional ethnographic approaches (see, for example, Langness and Frank Reference Langness and Frank1978; Banks Reference Banks1990; Laterza Reference Laterza2007; Narayan Reference Narayan1999; Nyamnjoh Reference Nyamnjoh2011; Tallman Reference Tallman and De Angelis2002). This appeal of literature (particularly the novel) among anthropologists arises from the recognition and prescription of experimental practices of textual representation in anthropology that enhance the anthropological representation of social realities (see Bohannan Reference Bohannan1966; Clifford Reference Clifford1988; Marcus and Cushman Reference Marcus and Cushman1982; Marcus and Fischer Reference Marcus and Fischer1986). This anthropological quest to engage with literature is usually confronted with the challenge of ethnography as a ‘field-based’ mode of knowledge production.
Ethnography is widely accepted as the paradigmatic approach in anthropology that employs careful and detailed descriptions to address the discipline’s central question: ‘What does it mean to be human?’ (Blasco and Wardle Reference Blasco and Wardle2007: 1). Ethnography has thus been long acknowledged as that which defines the anthropological approach to the critique of human culture and social reality (see Clifford Reference Clifford1980; Marcus and Fischer Reference Marcus and Fischer1986). Yet, understood principally as participant observation, there is also a weariness with the reduction of the anthropological project to ethnography (cf. Ingold Reference Ingold2014). In reality, ethnographic writing itself is not unlike other textual forms of fictional representation common to literature (Clifford Reference Clifford1980; Reference Clifford, Clifford and Marcus1986; Reference Clifford1988; Webster Reference Webster1982). In the end, anthropology and literature both ‘claim to capture life’ (Fassin Reference Fassin2014: 41).
Literary production in general and novels in particular enrich the ethnographic imagination of anthropologists working in particular times and places (contexts). Indeed, ‘the novel’, Clara Reeves wrote (cited in Ross Reference Ross1975: 29), is a picture of real life and manners, and of the times in which it was written. Specifically, in acknowledgement of anthropology’s kinship with literary studies, some contemporary approaches in anthropology think of novels as ‘ethnographic terrains’ that alert the social science researcher to ‘less visible’ or neglected themes and aspects of a given phenomenon (Fine and Martial Reference Fine and Martial2012: 156). Furthermore, ‘social scientists and anthropologists “borrow” from the analogies and imagery often used in literary analysis’. The focus is on ‘the social, political, and historical contexts’ with which the literary texts engage and in which they are produced (De Angelis Reference De Angelis2002: 1–2). For instance, in her famous essay ‘Shakespeare in the bush’, Laura Bohannan (Reference Bohannan1966) provides an illuminating demonstration of this affinity between anthropology and literature with her description and analysis of how the Tiv people in Nigeria interpreted and engaged with her narration of Shakespeare’s Hamlet to them.
As with novels, the meanings embedded in ethnographic accounts are said to be ‘allegorical’ and ‘uncontrollable’ in the sense of how they are received by readers (Clifford Reference Clifford, Clifford and Marcus1986: 99, 119). Also, another important feature common to both the novel and anthropological representation is the compelling power of ‘the story’ as a narrative form: in both the novel and ethnography ‘we perceive ourselves, our lives, as narrative, as story’ (Brink Reference Brink1998: 14). Thus, while it is true that fictionalized accounts in novels are copies that are never fully reality in the sense of the ethnographic present (Goody Reference Goody1997), both forms seem to share a common concern with representing the lives people live, have lived, or could live. Indeed, this worry about the boundary between ethnography and the literary is not new: note, for example, the pedagogic efforts to cultivate some traditions of writing among African students at the prestigious William Ponty School in Senegal (see Warner Reference Warner2016). Yet, part of the task of decolonizing anthropology today involves the ways in which we can move past the ‘conventional’ anthropological fixation with the idea that the only real and valid ethnographic informant is the ‘individual (and living) subject’ (Bubandt Reference Bubandt2009: 296). There is some cognitive ambivalence involved in dealing with fiction and a putative truthful reality. Even so, the epistemological value of literature for the anthropologist can be broadly envisaged in at least three orientations: in relation to an archival search for ‘sources’; in relation to the search for alternative modes and styles of writing; or, lastly, in relation to inquiries into the modes and practices of literary and cultural production (Wiles Reference Wiles2018). My own orientation here is inscribed in the first: the quest to fill what seems like a gap in anthropological representations of the early postcolony in Africa.
My effort to link Mbembe’s anthropological critique of the postcolony to Achebe’s literary representations of postcolonial politics builds on this recognition of the affinity between anthropology and literature. I use the two novels by Chinua Achebe as examples to examine the themes of elites, corruption and postcolonial decay in the early years of Nigeria’s development. I analyse the relevance of Achebe’s novels for understanding Nigeria as a country that has been plagued by narratives of corruption and the absence of a morally disciplined elite – two defining themes of its trajectory as a postcolonial state. Yet, given the remarkable absence of anthropological observations and analysis on these themes during that era, I show how Achebe’s novels serve as an ethnographic informant that helps contextualize the cultural development of postcolonial jouissance among Nigeria’s elite. In this sense, my analysis of Achebe’s novelistic work also reveals his astuteness as a social and cultural critic as well as a political thinker of the postcolony.
Chinua Achebe and Nigeria’s postcolony
Like many still do today, Mr Green attributes Obi Okonkwo’s involvement in an act of bribery and the phenomenon of corruption itself in Africa to the racial constitution of Africans. To be more precise, he attributes them to the impact of Africa’s harsh geography and climate on ‘the mental and physical’ abilities of Africans as a race. As he sees it, through colonialism the white man brought ‘Western education’ to the African, but this was clearly futile: ‘what use’ has it been to Obi Okonkwo, he asks (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 30)? In Catherine Lynnette Innes’s (Reference Innes1990: 43) excellent examination of Achebe’s works, she remarks that Green and his fellow British members of the colonial social club see ‘Obi and all Africans’ as people of ‘a race apart, whose psychology and mentality is permanently alien’.
In this sense, Mr Green, a colonial official, was also making an anthropologically problematic claim about Africans as racially different from Westerners, who would be morally superior and not so corrupt. As Chinua Achebe (Reference Achebe1978: 2) writes, colonial racism is the foundational ‘image of Africa’ in that it is ‘the desire – one might indeed say the need – in Western psychology to set Africa up as a foil to Europe, a place of negations at once remote and vaguely familiar in comparison with which Europe’s own state of spiritual grace will be manifest’. Of course, as in many other respects, this colonial racism in relation to corruption persists to this day. In reality, it sidesteps the multiple layers of complicity, old and new, in the networks and flows of corruption within which Africans, Westerners and the rest of the global capitalist order operate in postcolonial enclaves (cf. Ferguson Reference Ferguson2006).
I have been concerned with the issue of elites and postcolonial power at a particular historical moment: the early postcolony. In recent years, corruption has been a defining theme in studies of the trajectories and narratives of postcolonial power in Africa. Particularly striking is the corruption of African elites and their attachment to an orgiastic enjoyment of the material resources and privileges that their power confers upon them; these elements have featured prominently in recent histories and ethnographies of postcolonial power. Nigeria has been a very rich, if by no means exceptional, context from which these critiques of postcolonial elites and corruption have emerged. Since about the turn of the twenty-first century, a number of publications on Nigeria’s economy and society, drawn mainly from the disciplines of anthropology, political science and history, have made this case more compellingly than I could do here.
Within anthropology, Daniel Jordan Smith’s A Culture of Corruption: everyday deception and popular discontent in Nigeria (Reference Smith2007) received widespread attention at a time when Nigeria and Nigerians were increasingly known for and stereotyped by the various advance-fee fraud schemes and scams encapsulated by the ‘419’ section of the Nigerian criminal code. The book triggered intense conversations around the complex moralities and practices of everyday corruption within which both elites and ordinary Nigerians are entangled. Only two years before Smith’s publication, in an equally insightful and highly trenchant work, Andrew Apter had already drawn our attention to the role of oil as that dark substance that has served as the corrupting glue of Nigeria’s nation since at least the 1970s. In The Pan-African Nation: oil and the spectacle of culture in Nigeria, Apter (Reference Apter2005) examines the multifaceted character of ‘corruption’ in Nigeria, including its despotic and nepotistic underpinnings and ramifications, as a result of petro-dollars. Combining anthropological methods with astute political reporting and analysis, Wale Adebanwi published Authority Stealing: anti-corruption war and democratic politics in post-military Nigeria in Reference Adebanwi2012. This is an important monograph on the fraught character, complex politics and contradictions in Nigeria’s ‘anti-corruption’ campaigns following the country’s return to civilian rule under the presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo.
Most recently, two historians, Steven Pierce and Stephen Ellis, have sought to bring the fractious politics of contemporary corruption discourse in Nigeria into more wide-ranging discussions of the foundations of the Nigerian polity, from its precolonial and colonial origins. In Moral Economies of Corruption: state formation and political culture in Nigeria, Pierce (Reference Pierce2016) argues that, in contemporary Nigeria, corruption is a polysemic term that nonetheless denotes a singular understanding: the abuse of trust by ordinary citizens and political leaders in office, for personal gain. However, he insists on the importance of historicizing the ‘political and cultural work’ associated, over time, with how people come to recognize a wide range of activities and practices in Nigeria as part of this ‘corruption’. From the starting point of northern Nigeria, Pierce offers an historical insight into the changing moralities associated with the meanings of corruption. Similarly, in the last book he would write, This Present Darkness: a history of Nigerian organized crime, Stephen Ellis (Reference Ellis2016) remarks that the contemporary experience of corruption in Nigeria has old and complex genealogies that have only been made worse by the country’s leadership: ‘Nigeria had the misfortune to acquire a political elite and a political system that were shot through with practices of fraud and embezzlement, not to mention illicit violence’ (ibid.: 4). Indeed, writing immediately after the civil war of 1966 that devastated the new Nigerian polity, Walter Schwarz – that irreverent and long-time commentator on Nigeria affairs – remarked: ‘That politicians were corrupt became less and less of a secret, until it reached even the necessarily-restrained pages of Lagos newspapers’ (Reference Schwarz1968: 35). At their core, these histories and ethnographies of postcolonial power, including their focus on the elites and corruption, define the shifting horizons from postcolonial euphoria and hope, on the one hand, to multiple registers of decay, disenchantment and disillusionment.
Chinua Achebe is one of Africa’s most distinguished literary figures. Like his other well-known contemporary, Wole Soyinka, Achebe is Nigerian. He was born on 16 November 1930, in the south-eastern Nigerian town of Ogidi, not too far from the buzzing and electrifying urban centre of Onitsha. After his graduation from University College in Ibadan in 1954, he first worked for the Nigerian Broadcasting Service (NBS) before eventually embarking on a full-time career in writing and university teaching, first at the University of Nigeria in Nsukka and then at several institutions in the USA.
Throughout his career, Achebe maintained a clear social commitment to the burning questions and issues of his time, including the divisive question of Ibo secession during the Nigerian–Biafran civil war of 1967, following the deadly coup of 1966 led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu. While Achebe emphasized in his essay ‘The role of the writer in a new nation’ that ‘[a]fter all the novelist’s duty is not to beat this morning’s headline in topicality, it is to explore in depth the human condition’, he nevertheless agreed that ‘contemporary issues’, including ‘politics’ or ‘city life’, are ‘legitimate themes for the writer’ (Reference Achebe1964: 157, cited in Ogungbesan Reference Ogungbesan1974: 43). From the outset, in his novels, short stories and critical writing, Achebe responded profoundly to the cultural and political crises of the postcolonial state in Nigeria. His most notable critiques of the Nigerian postcolony are set out in his essays The Trouble with Nigeria (Achebe Reference Achebe1983) and There Was a Country: a personal history of Biafra (Achebe Reference Achebe2012). Published shortly after his return to Nigeria in 1976, following a decade in the USA, The Trouble with Nigeria stated in its very opening salvo that, given ‘[t]here is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian character’, the country’s fundamental problem is ‘simply and squarely a failure of leadership’ (Achebe Reference Achebe1983: 1). In his assessment, ‘the seminal absence of intellectual rigour in the political thought of our founding fathers’ was matched only by their ‘tendency to pious materialistic wooliness’, wherein we find a towering and highly admired figure such as Obafemi Awolowo affirming his faith in money and enrichment while Nnamdi Azikiwe pledged to ‘utilize my earned income to secure my enjoyment of a high standard of living’ (ibid.: 11). Instead of ‘selfless leaders of their people’, Achebe concluded that this plain devotion to enrichment and enjoyment could only lead Nigeria to ‘produce aggressive millionaires’ (ibid.: 11). Similarly, There Was a Country offers not only Achebe’s recollections of the events leading up to and during the Nigerian–Biafran civil war but also his assessments of ‘Nigeria’s painful transitions’, the role of corruption in state failure and the rise of terrorism. These are all ills that still plague the most populous country in Africa today. Thus, following Tejumola Olaniyan (Reference Olaniyan2001: 22), Achebe’s political novels elaborate an ‘archaeology of the postcolonial African state’ whose origins can be traced from the dislocations and ruptures of colonialism first described in Things Fall Apart (Reference Achebe1958) and continued in the struggles described in Arrow of God (Reference Achebe1964), which all culminate in the crises experienced in postcolonial decadence described in No Longer at Ease (Reference Achebe1960) and A Man of the People (Reference Achebe1966). The collective and cumulative insights from a careful reading illustrate how Achebe’s major novelistic oeuvre on this theme is ‘unusually prescient’ in terms of how it ‘foreshadows the crisis of legitimacy facing postcolonial African states today’ (Olaniyan Reference Olaniyan2001: 22).
As Emmanuel Obiechina (Reference Obiechina, Lindfors and Schild1976: 126) argues, Achebe’s novels are also defined by the use of scatology to ‘prick the vast bubble of respectability blown up by the African elite’, particularly in those early years after independence. The novels I discuss here share the same political sensibility: the representation of corruption and decadence as the defining features of the late colonial and early postcolonial political culture in Africa. I will therefore discuss these novels in terms of the broader sense of Mbembe’s notion of jouissance. But more than that, the two novels underscore the complex social and cultural fabric within which elite jouissance and corruption thrive. The novels underline the kinds of social pressures, complicities and entanglements that produce elites such as Obi Okonkwo. This is a social matrix that has been described as the ‘moral economy of corruption’ in Africa (Olivier de Sardan Reference Olivier de Sardan1999; cf. Smith Reference Smith2007). In vivid and intricate descriptions, Achebe uses his literary imagination to provide an anthropologically informed response to Mr Green’s British Council friend who asked why a young man like Obi would take a bribe and jeopardize his fledgling career as a young Nigerian civil servant.
With reference to No Longer at Ease, I unpack the cultural dynamics of mutuality and complicity that connect elites and their communities in postcolonial Africa. I then discuss the theme of decadence in A Man of the People in relation to the raw politics of sexual corruption. I conclude by returning to my initial discussion of the value of this African literary archive for anthropological discussions of the representation of elites in the African postcolony.
No Longer at Ease: corruption and complicity
No Longer at Ease (Reference Achebe1960) is the second novel in a trilogy that also includes Achebe’s first novel, Things Fall Apart (Reference Achebe1958), and his third, Arrow of God (Reference Achebe1964). All engage with the structural and deep psychological changes that result from the colonial encounter between actors from the Igbo communities and the exigencies of ‘modernizing’ European institutions in Nigeria. Achebe had used the first novel to criticize European misrepresentations of African people undergoing the colonial experience. No Longer was his attempt to depict African practices of postcolonial accommodation and adaptation to these social and institutional changes. The novel is mainly about the trials and tribulations of Obi Okonkwo, a young man from the Igbo-speaking community of south-eastern Nigeria who has recently graduated with a BA in Classics from a British university and has just returned to Nigeria, where he submits to the temptations of an increasingly corrupt and corrupting society.
Initially, Obi is a scathing critic of corruption and those who take bribes. He associates the vice mainly with a lack of education and a lack of awareness of its ills. Hence, he blames the older generations of less well-educated African civil servants. In his mind, the ‘public service of Nigeria will remain corrupt’ until this old guard is replaced with younger workers who have obtained that precious ‘philosopher’s stone’, the university degree (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 6, 92). Obi’s education in Britain is made possible by the collective efforts of his village of Umuofia, whose Umuofia Progressive Union selects him as the first recipient of a scholarship in the form of a loan. The expectation of his kinsmen is that the loan will be repayable upon Obi’s graduation, return and employment in a top government agency with a high salary and other perks.
This socially embedded and culturally inscribed (village) process by which Obi becomes an elite is the first and perhaps most vital depiction of the symbolism of corruption for the new African elite. No doubt the result of the moral failures of elite individuals, corruption is nevertheless a collective responsibility. In the collective imaginary of his kinsmen, Obi’s success is a collective triumph: the entire community of villagers, especially those living in the same city as him (Lagos), can proudly point out that they too have produced an elite figure.Footnote 4 His success is a shining example of collective agency. Just as much as a child is his or her community’s responsibility, the community can take pride in his success (see Nyamnjoh Reference Nyamnjoh and Werbner2002; Reference Nyamnjoh, Englund and Nyamnjoh2004). Hence, members of his community proverbially describe Obi as ‘an only palm kernel’. For this reason, he must be handled with care, lest they lose him to the jealousy and envy of other rival communities. This is especially the case because Obi arrives from England with a fiancée (Clara) from another community that they disapprove of (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 6). This collective pride in Obi as the first, newly minted elite figure of the Umuofia people is expressed in superfluous phrases used during the welcoming ceremony organized in his honour by his kinsmen:
Welcome Address presented to Michael Obi Okonkwo, B.A. (Hons), London, by the officers and members of the Umuofia Progressive Union on the occasion of his return from the United Kingdom in his quest for the Golden Fleece. Sir, we the officers … present with humility and gratitude this token of our appreciation of your unprecedented academic brilliance. (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 31)
Given this reverence for Obi as their new elite figure, an ‘illustrious son and guest of honour’, they are disappointed when, in addition to addressing them in English, which ‘was most unimpressive’, Obi shows up at his own welcoming ceremony dressed in ‘his shirt-sleeves because of the heat’ when they had been expecting him to don the latest designer costume from London (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 32).
The novel opens with the scene of Obi at his trial on corruption charges, specifically for taking a bribe in exchange for exerting his influence over the award of a scholarship to the niece of the person who offered the bribe (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 1–2). Just as Obi’s academic success and eventual employment with the Government Scholarship Board have been a source of collective pride, so too do his eventual conviction and sentence mean collective embarrassment, shame and dishonour for his kinsmen in Lagos. They convene a meeting at the residence of the president of the village improvement union to find ways to help Obi get out of trouble. Here, a fellow villager in the city complains that ‘we paid eight hundred pounds to train him in England … instead of him being grateful he insults us because of a useless girl and now we are being called together again to find more money for him. What does he do with his big salary?’ (ibid.: 5). The president of the union feels rather insulted by the small amount that has now tarnished Obi’s reputation in the city of Lagos, saying, ‘I am against people reaping where they have not sown. But we have a saying that if you want to eat a toad you should look for a fat and juicy one’ (ibid.: 6). This implies that Obi should have sought or requested a larger bribe in return for the service provided.
Another fellow villager in the union suggests that Obi’s misfortune arises from his ‘lack of experience, he should not have accepted the money himself. What others do is to tell you to go and hand it to their houseboy. Obi tried to do what everyone does without finding out how it was done’ (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 6). The comments of Obi’s kinsmen betray a fascinating familiarity and complicity with the phenomenon of elite corruption, particularly with regard to giving and taking bribes. In fact, when Obi’s friend Joseph proudly tells his colleagues about Obi’s job as secretary at the Scholarship Board, one pertinently remarks: ‘E go make plenty money there. Every student who wan go England go go seeam for house’ (ibid.: 77). In other words, Nigerian public servants are clearly very corrupt – a reflection of popular expectation in Nigerian society more broadly (cf. Ogede Reference Ogede2001: 55).
There is an important lesson to take from such representations of the new African elite: that the ‘making’ of Obi into an elite figure in this fictional Igbo community exemplifies a communitarian mode of social production of elites. This is a mode that underlines the salient role of kinship in understanding corruption as a widely shared symbolic and material universe in postcolonial Africa (cf. Olivier de Sardan Reference Olivier de Sardan1999; Blundo etal. Reference Blundo, Olivier de Sardan, Bako-Arifari and Alou2006). Accordingly, Smith’s (Reference Smith2001; Reference Smith2007) ethnography of everyday corruption in south-eastern Nigeria in the 1990s and 2000s supports Achebe’s descriptions of popular understandings and expectations regarding elites. Put simply, there is a communitarian ethic regarding expectations of success and blurred perceptions of corruption. As one kinsman puts it at the meeting of the Umuofia Progressive Union in the novel:
We are not asking him to bring his salary to share among us. It is in the little things that he can help us. It is our fault if we do not approach him. Shall we kill a snake and carry it in our hand when we have a bag for putting long things in? (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 80)
Obi is, in their view, ‘a snake’ they killed collectively and so they all expect to ‘partake’ in its eating (cf. Bayart Reference Bayart1993; Chabal Reference Chabal2009).
To follow Francis Nyamnjoh’s (Reference Nyamnjoh2017b; Reference Nyamnjoh, Besteman, Cabot and Kalir2020) argument about ‘incompleteness’ as a global ontological reality, this entanglement of kinship in the social production of elites contextualizes expectations of reciprocity and their connections to corruption (cf. Bayart Reference Bayart1993; Chabal Reference Chabal2009; Daloz Reference Daloz2002; Reference Daloz2003; Olivier de Sardan Reference Olivier de Sardan1999; Smith Reference Smith2001; Reference Smith2007). One’s status as an elite is achieved through a constructive collaboration between one’s kin, the community and one’s self. Obi himself remarks that what his kin ‘did not know was that, having labored in sweat and tears to enroll their kinsman among the shining elite, they had to keep him there’ (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 98). Obi feels that his kinsmen should go easy on collecting the loans they have given him as an educational grant.
Sherry Ortner (Reference Ortner1997; Reference Ortner2006) has argued that agency is a socio-cultural construction. In connection to this point, in Achebe’s No Longer, the social drama of complicity between elite and ordinary people offers us a discerning insight into the workings of this cultural construction of postcolonial decadence among the elite. The web of moral obligations associated with kinship help push Obi towards a corrupt transaction. Yet, ultimately, Obi succumbs to corruption out of his own propensity for the chrematistics that Mbembe attributes to contemporary African elites. As Mbembe (Reference Mbembe1992: 6; see also Reference Mbembe2006: 159) writes, in Africa the social imaginary remains deeply embedded in struggles for material consumption that define a ‘marked taste for lecherous living’. Particularly among the elite, ‘[t]he “big men” among them live in huge palaces and enjoy luxuries that disregard the visible poverty among their people’ (Falola Reference Falola2003: 79). In Obi’s case, this great desire for material consumption is connected to his reckless personal lifestyle. Although he is offered a four-month grace period by the union in which to settle into his new life without great financial stress, he foolishly turns this down out of scorn and pride. By paying the full amount of the loan outright, he hopes to ‘undo’ the bonds of kinship and the expectations of reciprocity that bind him to the union members. Moreover, he ignores the wise counsel about life in Lagos delivered to him during his welcome ceremony by the union’s president: ‘If you follow its sweetness, you will perish’ (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 82). He takes a new car on hire purchase but fails to make provision to pay for insurance. He also goes on to adopt a lifestyle that has him frequently out at dinners and in nightclubs with his fiancée, Clara. This is precisely what he has been warned against, although he does not think that he has ‘been extravagant’ (ibid.: 97).
A Man of the People: the insecure virile postcolony?
There is a striking similarity in the acerbic critique of the political culture of the early African postcolony in Achebe’s A Man of the People and Armah’s The Beautyful Ones. Ode Ogede (Reference Ogede2000) claims that both novels share a common ‘vision’. In A Man, Achebe perceptively rendered his sense of postcolonial unease with the new elite. This elite is held captive by its boundless taste for the good life and its enjoyment. This is particularly true of the relations that male elites enjoy with women. In Achebe’s descriptions, the elite quest for postcolonial sexual enjoyment generates embarrassing displays of what Mbembe describes as pleonexia – ‘the stupefaction experienced in pleasure’. This frenetic pursuit of sexual jouissance by the postcolonial elite is linked to older regimes of violence and extraction but ultimately it must be understood in part in relation to ‘[t]he dialectics of power as enjoyment, enjoyment as possession, and possession as destruction’ (Mbembe Reference Mbembe2006: 160).
A Man is narrated solely through the voice of the main protagonist, Odili Samalu, a secondary school teacher. We first meet Odili at his school during a political campaign event for his former teacher, now turned member of parliament and Minister of Culture, Chief Dr Micah Nanga. The novel chronicles the total corruption of an elite with almost no moral fabric. Corruption is portrayed here predominantly through sexual affairs and through struggles among the leading men, although allusion is also made to their penchant for material accumulation. If the new elite in No Longer represented by the main protagonist, Obi, could attract sympathy from readers because his corruption seems to be the result of both social pressures and his own moral failings, in A Man the corruption is absolute and generalized. It is difficult to have empathy for Odili due to his lack of principles or values. The novel explores the theme of intergenerational struggle between the older and established elite, such as Nanga, and younger ones, such as Odili. In No Longer, Achebe gave only an indication of this struggle. Honourable Sam Okoli tells Obi about his younger Nigerian assistant secretary who was ‘an idiot’ whose ‘head was swollen like a soldier ant because he went to Ibadan University’, whereas he (the minister) takes pride in the fact that ‘a white man who went to Oxford … says sir’ to him (Achebe Reference Achebe1960: 69). In A Man, this simmering intergenerational tension matures into full-blown conflict that is almost entirely articulated as a struggle over women and access to sexual gratification with women.
The first illustration of this preoccupation with sexual pleasure arises when Odili thinks about his plans to obtain a scholarship just so that he might have ‘an opportunity to visit Europe’ and the ‘kick’ it offers. He quips that he is not referring to the ‘white girls – you can have those out here nowadays’ (Achebe Reference Achebe1966: 19). Chief Nanga also hints at this theme of sexual gratification when he tries to entice Odili to make up his mind to visit him in the capital city, Bori, where he will offer him his ‘guest-room’ which is ‘self-contained’. He says to Odili: ‘You can live by yourself and do anything you like there, it’s all yours’ (ibid.: 20, emphasis in the original). Odili’s sexual lust is further revealed when his friend Andrew visits him later in the evening after the minister’s departure. As soon as Andrew walks in, he asks of him, ‘Did you find out about that girl?’, referring to the interest he expressed in Edna, Chief Nanga’s soon-to-be second wife. He had seen her in the minister’s company at the campaign event that features in the opening scene of the novel. His friend duly reproaches Odili: ‘Why na so so girl, girl, girl, girl been full your mouth? Wetin? So person no fit talk serious talk with you’ (ibid.: 23).
Odili dismissively introduces his own girlfriend, Elsie, to us in this way:
Well, Elsie! Where does one begin to write about her? … Elsie was, and for that matter still is, the only girl I met and slept with the same day – in fact within an hour … She was one of those girls who sends out cries in the heat of the thing. (Achebe Reference Achebe1966: 26–7)
This vulgar depiction of Elsie is soon followed by his account of his next-door neighbour, a medical student conveniently nicknamed ‘Irre’, short for ‘irresponsible’. It is said that Irre manages to get the tough ‘unbreakable’ girl on campus and makes sure to emerge from his room sweating profusely while holding a used and sullied condom in his hand as evidence of his accomplishments (Achebe Reference Achebe1966: 28–9).
In turn, the Honourable Nanga’s show of his sexual prowess is first represented when an American couple, Jean and John, visit him at home. Here, Jean is said to ‘flirt eagerly with Micah’. This does not prevent Odili from having sexual relations with her later that evening after a party at her home at which Nanga cannot stay; he goes off for a sexual escapade of his own at a hotel in town (Achebe Reference Achebe1966: 53–9). In the end, Odili’s sexual appetite collides with that of his friend and former teacher, the Honourable Minister Nanga, who, upon seeing Elsie, asks Odili: ‘Tell me something, Odili. How serious are you about this girl, Elsie?’ (ibid.: 28–9). Because Odili plays down his relationship with Elsie, calling her ‘just a good-time girl’, Nanga deems it reasonable that he too gets a taste of her, to the utter fury of Odili (ibid.: 73–83).
From this moment onwards all hell is let loose. Odili enters into politics and joins a friend, Max, to create a political party in a vain effort to exact revenge by trying to eject the minister from his parliamentary seat. Parallel to his effort on the political front, he launches an attack on the minister’s ‘romantic’ life by dating the minister’s soon-to-be second wife, Edna. In the end, their sexual proclivities get entangled with the political life of their Anata constituency. This effectively transforms the sexual politics of these two ‘big men’ into the deconstructive politics of the state to the extent that the country is thrown into chaos by a military coup.
If the postcolony is marked and marred by the pursuit of jouissance by the African elite in contemporary Africa, as Mbembe observes, the representations offered by the early African novel, as exemplified by Achebe’s two works, amply indicate their presence right from its very start in the 1960s. Certainly fictional in their nature, the novels nevertheless conjure messy images of the elite culture of corruption in an African state that has continuously valued the pursuit of both forms of jouissance described by Mbembe. This critique of postcolonial political culture offers important insights into the social production and material conditions of elites. In comparison to these literary representations, how did anthropological studies engage with the political evolutions of the early postcolony? In the final section, I draw on a few examples to illustrate some of the limitations of anthropological representations of the period and the value of taking such literary representations more seriously for socio-cultural analysis today.
Chinua Achebe and the anthropology of new states in Africa
In his chapter in the volume Old Societies and New States: the quest for modernity in Asia and Africa that he edited, renowned anthropologist Clifford Geertz (Reference Geertz and Geertz1964) remarked of Nigeria that, at independence in 1960, ‘[t]he sort of form that leadership was to take, who was to provide it, and how, in the working of this Swiss-clock governmental mechanism, it was to actually be produced remained, however, entirely obscure’. Precisely for this reason, the question of postcolonial leadership in the new states was not insignificant. Yet, while this has become a dominant theme in recent historical and ethnographic studies, older ethnographic studies of the social and cultural anthropology of Africa do not offer any real sense of engagement with this question. Rather, owing to the colonial anthropology project, several works of the past focused mainly on trying to document the social organization and cultural practices of various African ‘tribes’. It was feared that these were in danger of eventual ‘extinction’ because of the ongoing ‘civilizing mission’ that colonialism had initiated. For example, eminent British social anthropologists such as Lucy Mair (Reference Mair1962a) were still largely concerned with aspects of ‘primitive government’, even as she occasionally paid attention to current developments such as the elections in Nyasaland (Malawi) in 1961 (Mair Reference Mair1962b). This focus on the social structures of African societies under the changing conditions of the ‘civilizing mission’ seems to have been the basis for the establishment in 1925 of the British state-sponsored research institute the International Institute of African Languages and Culture (IIALC), later renamed the International African Institute (IAI). Summarizing the kind of research interests that mostly attracted the attention of Western ethnographers of the time, the African anthropologist Paul Nkwi has argued of the IAI’s establishment of the Africa journal in 1928:
[It] inspired monographs on African politics (African Political Systems 1940, edited by Meyer Fortes, and Tribes Without Rulers 1958, edited by John Middleton, David Tait, and Laura Bohannan), cosmology and religion (African Worlds 1954, edited by Daryll Forde), witchcraft (Witchcraft and Sorcery in East Africa 1963, edited by John Middleton and E. H. Winter), and kinship (African Systems of Kinships and Marriage, 1956, edited by A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and Daryll Forde) … Beattie and Middleton edited Spirit Mediumship and Society in Africa (1969). (Nkwi Reference Nkwi, Lins Ribeiro and Escobar2006: 157–8)
Of course, there is no denying that anthropologists of that generation were interested in the study of African politics. However, this interest was not directed at practices that defined the everyday politics of that ‘modernizing’ time; rather, it was the ‘primitive’ or ‘traditional’ institutions and cultural practices of power and authority that concerned them. Corruption and authoritarian systems of personal rule were taking shape on the horizons of recently emerged postcolonial state formations in Africa. However, these seemed not to have been central to the ethnographic concerns of anthropologists working around that time.
In fact, although Mair has a chapter in Primitive Government entitled ‘Primitive government and modern times’, she was specifically interested in ‘what has happened to the primitive political systems’ of the various ‘tribes’ explored in the book (Reference Mair1962a: 256). In her ethnographic report of the Nyasaland elections, she does allude to the possible role that ‘intimidation’ and ‘corrupt practices’ might have played in the electioneering process (Mair Reference Mair1962b: 28, 77). She points to ‘the regulations dealing with corrupt practices’ that were instituted for the ‘special circumstances of Nyasaland’, suggesting that these corrupt practices were related to concerns with spirituality or witchcraft: ‘“undue influence”, threats to inflict … by any supernatural or non-natural means or pretended supernatural or non-natural means, any temporal or spiritual injury, damage, harm or loss’ (ibid.: 28). These observations do not really reveal much about the everyday practices of corruption. Yet, leading political figures in Nyasaland at the time, particularly Dr Hastings Kamuzu Banda – leader of the Nyasaland African Congress Party from 1958 and leader of Malawi from 1964 to 1992 – were already linked to accusations of corruption (Englund Reference Englund2002). In Mair’s New Nations (Reference Mair1963), however, we find detailed ethnographic reflections on the social changes that these newly independent states were experiencing at the time. These reflections illustrate how tribesmen like the Tallensi and longstanding cultural practices such as marriage are coping with the demands of newly attained statehood as well as the changes in the ‘balance of power’ between the old elite (chiefs) and the new elite (state bureaucrats and politicians) through party politics. However, this book does not really address ‘corruption’ in relation to this new elite (ibid.).
Similarly, Joan Vincent’s African Elite: the ‘big men’ of a small town (Reference Vincent1968) is very ethnographically detailed and astute in discussing the social strategies for upward social mobility in the small town of Gondo in Uganda. Like in Mair’s work, however, we do not find references to corruption as a political practice by these elites or to the wider authoritarian political context of the Ugandan state that was evolving under Milton Obote at the time. Similar to Mair’s and Vincent’s studies, Arnold Epstein’s very interesting account of Politics in an Urban African Community (Reference Epstein1960 [1958]) does not engage with this question of the emerging African elite and the anxieties of postcolonial political leadership. The volume Social Change in Modern Africa, edited by Aidan Southall and Daryll Forde (Reference Southall and Forde1961), was equally focused on changes at the level of interpersonal and intercommunity relations while remaining mute on their implications for the broader political system and for emerging African elites.
Taken together, then, from the late colonial and early postcolonial moments, many anthropologists would have probably sensed the gradual but steadily evolving and changing guises of corruption and political decadence in African states, particularly among the emerging political elite. However, this is not apparent when we read their anthropological studies from the period. Yet, it is fair to say that Lucy Mair’s and Joan Vincent’s works were not the most dominant in terms of the prominent claims that anthropology as a discipline was making in relation to the understanding of culture, politics and society in Africa at the time. Although trained in anthropology, as women, they were not central figures in disciplinary debates. Mair trained at the LSE under Malinowski and, at the outbreak of World War Two, she joined the Royal Institute of International Affairs; the early part of her career was thus steered towards international relations and colonial administration, where she gained wide recognition for her work. Similarly, Joan Vincent’s work, though eminent in its anthropological focus and meticulous in her analysis of social change in small communities, attracted little attention (probably less than it deserved).
Instead, in addition to the earlier volume on African political systems edited by Meyer Fortes and E. E. Evans-Pritchard (Reference Fortes and Evans-Pritchard1940), the scholarly outputs that most shaped anthropological interest in African politics following the first wave of independence were the two volumes edited by Marc J. Swartz, Victor Turner and Arthur Tuden. The first, Political Anthropology (Swartz etal. Reference Swartz, Turner and Tuden1966), was borne out of panels at the American Anthropological Association (AAA) meeting in 1964. The second, Local-level Politics (Swartz Reference Swartz1968), was based on a collection of papers presented at the Wenner-Gren conference of 1966. Both volumes (more than thirty contributions across the two) sought to take political anthropology beyond the focus on social structure and the village (as a local setting). The key analytical concepts of this approach were a focus on process, social change and local-level politics – although here the focus on local politics was understood to mean part of a wider and more complex social whole. Here, too, the extensive case method pioneered by the leading figures of British social anthropology, particularly those in the Manchester School such as Max Gluckman (see Werbner Reference Werbner2020), was seen as the dominant methodological approach to lead the anthropologist beyond the confines of local fieldwork. This processual approach also meant that ‘the local’ was now thought to be enmeshed in broader social and political relations and organizations.
Aside from the fact that this new movement in political anthropology was driven by Western scholars, it was also predominantly led by male scholars, who, while well aware of the impact of colonialism on colonized societies, failed to adequately problematize this question in terms of the relations of power in the new situations it created (Balandier Reference Balandier1952; Asad Reference Asad and Asad1973; Mafeje Reference Mafeje1976). Thus, these disciplinary developments in political anthropology did not sketch a context for postcolonial analyses in which the new nations, the new elite and the issue of corruption could emerge as salient themes. That is, this ‘new’ political anthropology failed to critically engage with the colonial origins of the new nations and the issues of postcolonial leadership and elite corruption so poignantly raised by Achebe’s novels. And yet, as Peter Ekeh (Reference Ekeh1975) argued in his seminal essay, the fundamental questions of nation building and political leadership in postcolonial contexts are intricately bound to colonial dislocations of precolonial societies. In the end, the postcolonial order in new nations in Africa is fragmented into ‘two realms’: the primordial and civic, with their corresponding moral and amoral foundations and two publics. Ekeh’s thesis of the ‘two publics’ illustrates the postcolonial dilemma of leadership for elites in the new nations that Achebe raises in No Longer at Ease: the new elite persons are torn between their responsibility towards the state and towards their ‘own’ people (village, ethnic or other groups). The reluctance of anthropologists in the early 1960s to address the question of the elite and postcolonial decadence may have been related to their struggle to get out of the anthropological confinement in the local. But it also appears to have been driven by their fear of falling back on a racist colonial discourse of the moral inferiority of Africans, as Mr Green does in No Longer at Ease. After all, in the 1960s, anthropology did not enjoy a particularly stellar reputation among the elite of the new nations, even though some among them (including Jomo Kenyatta and Nnamdi Azikiwe) studied the discipline. Unhindered by such fears of attacks as a proponent of colonial racism, Ekeh and African writers in the literary circles could more easily raise issues that seemed too sensitive for Western anthropologists. For anthropologists today, taking this literary archive seriously, as Achille Mbembe has done in his own work, is an important step in enriching and decolonizing the anthropological archive in African studies.
Acknowledgements
This article developed initially from my teaching of a postgraduate course at the Department of Anthropology at the University of the Witwatersrand, titled ‘African ethnography’, from 2017 to 2020. I thank my students in the various cohorts of this class whose responses and engagements with the materials we have shared in the course have shaped my own reading and understanding profoundly. At the annual conference of the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom (ASAUK) in Birmingham in September 2018, I presented a version of this article at a panel convened by Wale Adebanwi titled ‘Provisional Notes on the Postcolony: Twenty-five Years After’. I thank both Wale Adebanwi and the IAI, which sponsored the panel as well as my trip to the UK. I also thank Oben Timothy Mbuagbo at the University of Buea, who many years ago first drew my attention to the pedagogic value of African literary production for social and political analyses. Additional research for this article in the summer of 2020 was supported by an ad hoc grant from the Research Committee of the Faculty of Humanities at the University of the Witwatersrand, for which I am also thankful. Last, I am grateful to the anonymous reviewers of this essay for their helpful comments and suggestions.
Competing interests
The author declares none.
Rogers Orock is a senior lecturer in the Anthropology Department, University of the Witwatersrand. He is also a lecturer in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Buea, Cameroon.