1
WOLE SOYINKA
(b. 1934 – still alive)
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Wole Soyinka [pronounced wo lay (stress on the first syllable) shaw ying kuh
(stress on the second syllable)] was “the first black African writer to receive the ______Prize in Literature” (Ramazani 2:627).
2. Born in western Nigeria, he received most of his upper-level collegiate education in England, taking his doctorate in 1973, when he was 38 (627).
3. Not just a poet, he has written significant dramas and novels (626).
4. His work has denounced “both the degradations of Western ______[in Africa] and the . . . [African] ______and thugs” who replaced this colonialism with brutal, repressive regimes (627).
5. Soyinka’s “courage has landed him repeatedly in Nigerian ______” (626) or forced him “into exile” (627).
6. Stylistic devices of his poetry: wit, verbal ambiguity, satire, punning, and violent juxtapositions (627).
II. “TELEPHONE CONVERSATION”
A. STRUCTURE
1. Stanza one(1-9): An African who is living in London, England, telephones a landlady who has advertised an ______(called a “flat” in Britain) for rent. Knowing that many people in England discriminate against Africans, he quickly tells the landlady, “I am ______” (5).
2. Stanza two(10-17): He expects an outright rejection or acceptance concerning the apartment, but her answer surprises him. She asks, “ARE YOU ______/ OR VERY ______?” (10-11).
The implication is that she will accept him as a tenant if he is a light-skinned African. Her question offends him more than an open ______would have: He marvels to himself that what she had asked “was______!” (14).
3. Stanzathree (18-26): In the last part of the conversation, he slyly makes ______of the landlady, showing her to be not only bigoted but also ignorant. For instance, he uses a word which she does not know, “______” (22).
4. Stanza four (27-35): His closing list of the different ______of the areas of his body shocks the landlady, who slams down the ______, finally aware that she is being made ______of.
B. THEME
1. The poem is a protest against discrimination on the basis of ______color.
2. The petty nastiness of racial ______is shown through a person being denied an apartment because of the color of his/her skin.
C. IMAGERY
1. Many color words are used.
2. Red is the color of the telephone “______” (13), the pillar-box (13, the British term for mailbox), the bus (13), and presumably the lady’s imagined “lip-______” (8). Thus redseems to be identified with racism.
3. The other colors are those which the African uses in describing himself: “______” (22), brunette (26), “______blonde” (30), and “______black” (32).
4. The key color word is “______” (23), since a spectroscope is a scientific instrument for studying color bands.
5. The word prepares us for the band of colors which the speaker implies makes up every person’s ______.
6. It also goes back to the distinction insisted on by the prejudiced landlady, who would need such an ______to distinguish the lightness or darkness of a prospective tenant.