¶ … Chimamanda Adichie Talks and the Whale Rider Film
The message in a story is what is obvious to the person reading it or watching it. The medium on the other hand is more subtle and is really what the reader or the audience and indeed society takes away from a work. Chimamanda Adichie demonstrates this in 'A Single Story' talk show on TED Talks as does Witi Ihimaera in his book which later became the film Whale Rider.
A Single Story, Chimamanda Adichie
Many intertwining stories make up the cultures we come from, and the lives that we lead as a people, society. Chimamanda Adichie who is a novelist is thankful that she is able to discover her true individuality. This novelist, however, cautions against drawing our understanding about a culture from one story about that culture (NPR, 2015), as it is prone to creating stereotyped understanding of a whole culture.
Using one story to form our understanding is unwise because the angle presented will form in our minds a picture that may not necessarily be true or wholesome. As such, we accept a singular understanding and it forms the basis of a stereotype. As explained by the novelist Chimamanda N. Adichie, a single story opens up room for stereotypes to be formed, and the danger in these is that they are half-truths, as they do not give the full picture. Stereotypes allow one story to represent all that makes up a culture (Hoop, 2014).
Thus, as this novelist explained in a TED talk, there should be freedom for expression of original, independent views, and these can come through authors who write about their own cultures. Writing about one's own culture would mean that one possesses a better understanding as one has interacted and reacted deeply with his/her own culture. She contrasts this with her personal experience of writing as a child about things that she had never experienced such as snow and children with blue eyes as it was what she read in the books availed to her. She illustrates this further by sharing her experience in college when her roommate expresses bewilderment at Chimamanda's fluency in English. Thus, she brings her point-of-view into focus, that stories are potent and especially so when many of them are brought together. In as much as they have been used in the past to destroy and portray a people in poor light, they can also be used to dignify the same as they portray them in their true light. (Hoop, 2014).
Whenever a story about a society gets repeated many times, it becomes accepted as the sole representative about a people, and sadly this has been the case for Africa. Africa, as a whole, has been labeled an impoverished country with little development, if any, and a place where the natives must live in fear in the midst of wild animals. This is a stereotype that has been reinforced over time. In the minds of many, it has negated the perception of existence of different countries, each with distinct languages. Instead, to many, that read only one point-of-view Africa is one whole nation with a single language and singular culture (The Borgen project, 2015). The medium thus, or what changes society will make are the writing of each culture's stories by its own authors and the acceptance of these views by society in order to form a more complete and thereby the true picture.
Whale Rider, the film and book by Witi Ihimaera
Witi Ihimaera, a Maori writer, expounds on the issue of stereotypes in his book which forms the basis of the film The Whale Rider (Film Education, 2003). This is one of the ways in which his vies and those expressed by Chimamanda Adichie are similar. He brings out the light of women who have been designated a place in society which they seek to break away from. Thus, though the obvious facts are that there needs to be a successor to the Chief, the message in the medium is that women must find a way to break out of the mold or the stereotype that hold them back. The main character, Pai, is portrayed as one who is seeking...
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