Faith Adiele's use of Self-Irony and the Braided Essay
Courtney A. Cannon
Blog Post—The Nigerian-Nordic Girls Guide to Lady
Problems—by Faith Adiele
7 October 2017
Topic: Importance
of Self-Irony
Question: How can
you use other lenses to define your experience, as in social constructs or social spaces?
In crafting a deeply personal piece of creative
expression there can be a risk in relying too heavily on identifiers and
demographic associations to carry the narrative. Repeatedly referring to an
illness and recovery, detrimental relationships, economic turmoil, or the woes
of “coming of age,” can become stale and mundane. What is worse, constantly
referring to a “dramatic” situation can be seen as a literary ploy or gimmick,
a lazy reliance on the part of the author to manipulate or solicit a particular
reader’s response, and downright offensive to the emotional intellect of the
reader. Faith Adiele’s masterful craftmanship in seamlessly incorporating the
negative experience of Ovarian Cancer within the fabric of her multifaceted
social demographic spaces does not fall into this cliché of the “topic” book.
Adiele’s The Nigerian-Nordic Girls Guide
to Lady Problems is a unique weave of interrelated scenes, emotions, textures,
and memories. I would classify her moving from the scenes of illness to her
childhood and personal identifications as a very long braided essay. However,
her crafting of the complex moves from space in the body, to memory, to present
contemplations of the two has greater depth because of her candid tone and
hints of self-deprecation. Her honesty of awkwardness, anger, self-disgust,
unanswered questions, all bring humor and lightness to the auditory experience for
the listener. Adiele crafted her interlocking weave of scene with physical sensations
and emotional memories with purposeful humor and self-irony. Such an approach
brings new life to topics of disease and racial issues, both of which can be
brushed off by unyielding readers. However, her use of self-irony brings surprise,
shock, laughter, and creates genuine emotional connection between her intimate
story and the reader. Her narrative becomes welcoming to the listener as each
layer unfolds with her humor and humanity. Humor, when used to discuss “hard”
topics answers the questions of the listener: “So what?” “What’s different about
your tale?” “Everybody has a similar story…what’s so unique about yours?” Her humanity
is expressed in the self-irony and humor of her telling her own tale. The topics
of suffering and finding comfortability within self-identity becomes
entertaining and relatable as she shifts from seemingly separate unrelated
scenes of disease, youth, family, and relationships—constructing a whole
character for the listener to envision and then understand. I appreciate her seamless
use of the “braided” technique and her honest tone of self-irony as she
grapples with the all too familiar issues of identity and social constructs and
protagonist flaw and impairment.
this is great Courtney and i appreciate your observations that move to the depth of her multi-layered story. Here's a moment that i think shaped: "However, her crafting of the complex moves from space in the body, to memory, to present contemplations of the two has greater depth because of her candid tone and hints of self-deprecation. Her honesty of awkwardness, anger, self-disgust, unanswered questions, all bring humor and lightness to the auditory experience for the listener"
ReplyDeleteno one has mentioned the "humor" as part of the craft that creates a unique narrative and personalizes the book as you have.
e
I really appreciated your analysis. I think that you are spot-on about Faith's use of irony and humor to disarm her readers and move beyond the stale feeling that can come from intensive focus on one person's specific health or traumatic issue. I'd never heard the term "braided essay" before, but I can see how that term applies very well to this essay.
ReplyDeleteI think there are interesting questions about what evokes a "whole person," as you described it, for one's audience. What aspects of demographic information are necessary? How much historical background of one's life and family is needed? If, like Faith, we are a member of a culture our readers might not be familiar with, what does that do to the writer's obligations to inform us? or does the impetus rest on us as readers to inform ourselves as we read?
I am struggling with these questions myself as I work on my longer memoir. I am curious to hear more of your thoughts.
-Ari
I liked how you pointed out how cliche a book like this could get, it has all the usual elements, but Adiele is able to go beyond our expectations and keep this genre fresh. It was fun to read so I forgot about all work that went into this book, how a project like this could get preachy or dwell too much on a certain topic. The humor kept me interested and reading, I can't imagine the book without it.
ReplyDelete