In preparation for class on TUESDAY, please read the attached source excerpt and respond to the following question: Based on the attached source, what sorts of problems were newly-independent countries in Africa evidently still faced with?

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In preparation for class on TUESDAY, please read the attached source excerpt and
respond to the following question:
Based on the attached source, what sorts of problems were newly-independent
countries in Africa evidently still faced with?
Due Tuesday, April 26 by class time.
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Transcribed Image Text:In preparation for class on TUESDAY, please read the attached source excerpt and respond to the following question: Based on the attached source, what sorts of problems were newly-independent countries in Africa evidently still faced with? Due Tuesday, April 26 by class time. 附件 05_StealingTheNationsRichs.jpg 您的回答 已布置 输入您的回答 上交 不公开评论 添加不公开评论
Stealing the Nation's Riches
After 1965, African novelists transferred their
for their own satisfaction. That, of course, was to be
anger from the foreign oppressor to their
own national leaders, deploring their greed,
corruption, and inhumanity. One of the
most pessimistic expressions of this betrayal of newly
independent Africa is found in The Beautiful Ones Are
Not Yet Born, a novel published by the Ghanaian author
Ayi Kwei Armah (AY-yee KWAY AR-mah) in 1968. The
author decried the government of Kwame Nkrumah and
was unimpressed with the rumors of a military coup,
which, he predicted, would simply replace the regime
with a new despot and his entourage of "fat men.'
Ghana today has made significant progress in reducing
expected. New people would use the country's power to
get rid of men and women who talked a language that
did not flatter them. There would be nothing different in
that. That would only be a continuation of the Ghanaian
way of life. But here was the real change. The individual
man of power now shivering, his head filled with the fear
of the vengeance of those he had wronged. For him
everything was going to change. And for those like him
who had grown greasy and fat singing the praises of their
chief, for those who had been getting themselves ready
for the enjoyment of hoped-for favors, there would be
long days of pain ahead. The flatterers with their new
white Mercedes cars would have to find ways of burying
old words. For those who had come directly against the
old power, there would be much happiness. But for the
nation itself there would only be a change of embezzlers
and a change of the hunters and the hunted. A pitiful
shrinking of the world from those days Tea her stll
looked back to, when the single mind was filled with the
hopes of a whole people. A pitiful shrinking, to days
when all the powerful could think of was to use the
power of a whole people to fill their own paunches.
Endless days, same days, stretching into the future with
no end anywhere in sight.
ART &
IDEAS
the level of corruption.
Ayi Kwei Armah, The Beautiful Ones Are Not
Yet Born
The net had been made in the special Ghanaian way that
allowed the really big corrupt people to pass through it.
A net to catch only the small, dispensable fellows, trying
in their anguished blindness to leap and to attain the
gleam and the comfort the only way these things could
be done. And the big ones floated free, like all the
slogans. End bribery and corruption. Build Socialism.
Equality. Shit. A man would just have to make
dn
his
mind that there was never going to be anything but
despair, and there would be no way of escaping it. . . .
In the life of the nation itself, maybe nothing really
According to Ayi Kwei Armah, who was to blame
for conditions in his country? Could the OAU
have dealt with situations such as this? Why or
new would happen. New men would take into their
hands the power to steal the nation's riches and to use it
why not?
Source: From The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born by Ayi Kwei Armah (Heinemann, 1989).
cebr o s
Transcribed Image Text:Stealing the Nation's Riches After 1965, African novelists transferred their for their own satisfaction. That, of course, was to be anger from the foreign oppressor to their own national leaders, deploring their greed, corruption, and inhumanity. One of the most pessimistic expressions of this betrayal of newly independent Africa is found in The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born, a novel published by the Ghanaian author Ayi Kwei Armah (AY-yee KWAY AR-mah) in 1968. The author decried the government of Kwame Nkrumah and was unimpressed with the rumors of a military coup, which, he predicted, would simply replace the regime with a new despot and his entourage of "fat men.' Ghana today has made significant progress in reducing expected. New people would use the country's power to get rid of men and women who talked a language that did not flatter them. There would be nothing different in that. That would only be a continuation of the Ghanaian way of life. But here was the real change. The individual man of power now shivering, his head filled with the fear of the vengeance of those he had wronged. For him everything was going to change. And for those like him who had grown greasy and fat singing the praises of their chief, for those who had been getting themselves ready for the enjoyment of hoped-for favors, there would be long days of pain ahead. The flatterers with their new white Mercedes cars would have to find ways of burying old words. For those who had come directly against the old power, there would be much happiness. But for the nation itself there would only be a change of embezzlers and a change of the hunters and the hunted. A pitiful shrinking of the world from those days Tea her stll looked back to, when the single mind was filled with the hopes of a whole people. A pitiful shrinking, to days when all the powerful could think of was to use the power of a whole people to fill their own paunches. Endless days, same days, stretching into the future with no end anywhere in sight. ART & IDEAS the level of corruption. Ayi Kwei Armah, The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born The net had been made in the special Ghanaian way that allowed the really big corrupt people to pass through it. A net to catch only the small, dispensable fellows, trying in their anguished blindness to leap and to attain the gleam and the comfort the only way these things could be done. And the big ones floated free, like all the slogans. End bribery and corruption. Build Socialism. Equality. Shit. A man would just have to make dn his mind that there was never going to be anything but despair, and there would be no way of escaping it. . . . In the life of the nation itself, maybe nothing really According to Ayi Kwei Armah, who was to blame for conditions in his country? Could the OAU have dealt with situations such as this? Why or new would happen. New men would take into their hands the power to steal the nation's riches and to use it why not? Source: From The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born by Ayi Kwei Armah (Heinemann, 1989). cebr o s
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