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Against a disturbing political backdrop and through an in-depth
appraisal of selected illustrative texts from major genres-poetry,
prose, and drama-Emmanuel Fru Doh presents the origins and growth
of a young but potent literature. To him, Anglophone-Cameroon
literature is a weapon in the hands of an oppressed English
speaking minority in his native Cameroon, Africa, who were unfairly
manipulated by the United Nations and Britain into a skewed
federation in the name of an independence deal.
Emmanuel Fru Doh, a native of Cameroon, holds a Ph.D. from the
University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria. He taught at the University
of Yaounde (E.N.S. Bambili) for almost a decade-the 90s-before
leaving for the US. He then had a brief stint as an Adjunct
Professor at the University of Minnesota before settling into the
Department of English at Century, a College within the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities (MnSCU) System. Poet, novelist,
social and literary critic, Emmanuel Fru Doh is the author of
Nomads: The Memoir of a Southern Cameroonian.
In Nomads, Emmanuel Fru Doh combines historical fact, legend, and
rumour to emerge with a memoir charged with nostalgia. In the
process, he merges scenes and events from several lives and the
process of nation building as they all unfold and mature with the
passing of time. It becomes obvious that these are somber moments
in Doh's life and that of the Cameroon nation, a nation that in
recent decades selfish and reckless leaders without goodwill,
foresight, or true love for the fatherland have succeeded in
destroying. It all boils down to one fact: indeed, there has always
been a socio-political agenda by the Francophone-dominated regimes,
but it had nothing to do with building a truly united Cameroon. The
plan has always been to tactfully subdue and eventually neutralize
the Anglophone dimension of the union.
Shadows, as the title insinuates, splits open and lays bare the
frightening vision of humanity, the heart of man depressed, a
veritable inferno in which there is little to be enjoyed and
everything to be endured, as all is vanity, a gnawing emptiness.
Nothing is but what it seems. Simple but without being simplistic,
there is in the damp climate of Doh's poetry broken promises,
displaced emotional centres, a pervading sense of doom, of
impending disaster, and a total helplessness reminiscent of Plato's
proverbial mythical cave in which all reality is but shadow, devoid
of substance, with the observer chained to the walls of his
feelings, beliefs, and unfulfilled ambitions. The second section,
'Celebration', is, however, a source of warmth, of light, the sun's
rays in an otherwise damp and and dark collection.
Characteristically, Africans in any Western country are asked so
many different questions about "Africa," as Westerners love to
refer to the many countries that make up that huge continent, as if
Africa were a single nation state. So one begins wondering why it
is that Africans, on the other hand, do not refer to individual
European countries as "Europe" simply, then the trends and
consequences of stereotyping begin setting in just as one is
getting used to being asked if Africa has a president, or if one
can say something in African. It is some of these questions that
Emmanuel Fru Doh has collected over the years and has attempted
answering them in an effort to shed some light on a continent that
is in many ways like the rest of the world, when not better, but
which so many love to paint as dark, backward, chaotic, and
pathetic.
Wading the Tide is an expression of profound emotions touching on a
wide range of issues-personal and political-from the birth of the
Cameroon nation, her political meandering, until the state of
emergency declared on the North West Province in 1992. Accordingly,
Doh complains, ridicules, and pays tribute, even as he instructs
and guides on timeless matters of life, all in an effort to draw
attention to his country's gradual, downward spiral into anomy.
ORIKI'BADAN, is an entertaining, revealing, and equally didactic
poem in which Doh, through an enchanting metaphorical backdrop,
recaptures a memorable era-rich, diverse, challenging, yet
gratifying-in the life of a distinguished institution-the
University of Ibadan, Nigeria. Characteristically bitter about
those in power and the socio-political state of affairs on the
African continent, this is a rare shot of Doh paying glaring
tribute to his alma mater along with the distinguished faculty and
student body that gave Ibadan its character during his days there
as a student.
Africa's Political Wastelands explores and confirms the fact that
because of irresponsible, corrupt, selfish, and unpatriotic
kleptocrats parading as leaders, the ultimate breakdown of order
has become the norm in African nations, especially those south of
the Sahara. The result is the virtual annihilation of once thriving
and proud nations along with the citizenry who are transformed into
wretches, vagrants, and in the extreme, refugees. Doh uses Cameroon
as an exemplary microcosm to make this point while still holding
imperialist ambitions largely responsible for the status quo in
Africa. Ultimately, in the hope of jumpstarting the process, he
makes pertinent suggestions on turning the tide on the continent.
In Africa, there is unrest, and possibly tragedy, when new trends
clash with traditional values. With a curmudgeonly stepmother who
harasses her even as she spoils her own biological daughter,
Mungeu', the protagonist, blazes a path for herself in the face of
many odds. But things go terribly wrong when she falls pregnant.
The dilemma of whether or not to keep the pregnancy, given
society's expectations, flings this young woman into direct
confrontation with a life that is beyond her years. She is bent on
succeeding: she will keep her baby, and with her training at a
girls' craft center, start a business and bring up her illegitimate
child. But Mungeu' can only make plans as she realises before long
that the authority to dispose of them does not rest with her alone;
there are other powerful forces out there.
Not Yet Damascus celebrates a tumultuous era without patriotic
leaders willing to transform their national wastelands into
thriving bastions. The collection salutes and queries: a panoramic
collection intended for the sensitization of all, hence the simple
yet evocative approach. "Poetry can be therapeutic, allowing the
poet to work through issues in life; to find solutions, clarity,
comfort, and peace of mind. It provides a vehicle of expression for
diverse attitudes and fresh insights. Emmanuel Fru Doh has achieved
this feat in this collection of poems Not Yet Damascus. He speaks
in a confident tone of prophetic utterances: advising, warning,
denouncing, protesting and chiding. His poetry has the twin virtues
of relevance and simplicity of diction. He has eschewed the
obscurantist ineloquence and syntactic jugglery of traditional
poets. Passion, energy and cutting irony are the hallmarks of the
poems in the anthology." - Peter Wuteh Vakunta, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, USA "This is the passionate poetry of a
patriotic son of Cameroon. Here is a contemplative, sensitive soul
that watches and registers on his emotional meter, and in potent
imagery, the terrible damage done to his people, country, and
continent." - Shadrach Ambanasom, Professor of Literature,
University of Yaounde I (E.N.S. Annex Bambili), Cameroon
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