Tuesday, November 17, 2009

The single story

Chimamanda Adichie gives a mind blowing lecture on single stories (with a lot of personal examples and a focus on the single story of Africa). Her criticism on the single storytelling is very convincing and makes you wonder about your own construction of stereotypes, easy readings of  otherness and the function of tourism (I always had in mind this type of single story when I hear touristic stories from far away lands and people, all these stories are so similar and unidimensional). After hearing Chimamanda Adichie, all my single stories came to mind and I was fascinated by her not-so-Foucauldian definition of power: Power is the ability not just to tell the story of another person, but to make it the definitive story of that person. 

The single story has serious implications when power is involved: besides the othering/objectification of a person or a group of people as an unified universalized/atemporal object, the single story is "what they become" and no one can beat the white colonial man at telling single stories (I am just curios, aren't they bored by the monotony of their own storytelling? I am. completely. ). But better watch the whole 20 minutes of wisdom:




via Sociological Images

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