Fractal Complexity in Mwalimu Toyin Falola’s A Mouth Sweeter than Salt: A Pluridisciplinary Exploration of Cultural Power

Abdul Karim Bangura

Abstract

While my extensive search yielded 48 scholarly citations and more than half a dozen scholarly book reviews on Mwalimu Toyin Falola’s A Mouth Sweeter than Salt: An African Memoir (2005), no systematic analysis has been done on the text, even though such potential exists. This study is an attempt to fill this gap. Specifically, I employ the mathematical concept of Fractal Dimension and Complexity Theory to explore the idea of spectrum progressing from more orderly to less orderly or to pure disorder in terms of cultural power in the text. This called for the utilization of the pPluridisciplianry approach that helped me to mix linguistics and mathematical approaches—more precisely, Linguistic Presupposition and Fractal Methodology. The results generated after the MATLAB computer runs suggest that the combination of negative and positive feedback loops, which form the basis of several African knowledge systems, also form a key mechanism of general self-organizing systems of cultural power discussed in A Mouth Sweeter than Salt: An African Memoir.

Introduction

Mwalimu Toyin Falola in his A Mouth Sweeter than Salt: An African Memoir (2005) redefines the autobiographical genre altogether. He weaves together personal, historical, and communal tales, coupled with political and cultural developments during the era immediately preceding and following Nigeria’s independence, to provide a unique and enduring picture of the Yoruba in the mid-20th Century. This was a time of hope and great expectations for the emerging new country. What appears in this literary memoir of this the period is a narrative pregnant with proverbs that are more like axioms, poetry, song, and humor.

Even though the chapters in this memoir stand out independently, Falola skillfully makes them flow together easily as a portrait of a narrator in his space and time. Falola presents more than just a story of his childhood experiences; rather, he narrates the riches of Yoruba culture and community—its history, traditions, pleasures, mysteries, household settings, contours of power, travails, and transmutations. Also evident in this memoir is that growing up in Ibadan, the second largest city in Africa, and being a quite observant youngster beginning atby the age of ten, Falola was able to fully comprehend early in his life the vast complicated social arrangements of the community. This experience would later provide him with the fortitude to conduct some of the most extensive oral interviews in Yoruba historical research.

A Mouth Sweeter than Salt has been cited in at least 48 scholarly sources, and over half a dozen scholarly book reviews have been written on it. Yet, no systematic analysis has been done on the text, even though such potential exists. This essay seeks to fill this gap. I employ the mathematical concept of Fractal Dimension and Complexity Theory to explore the idea of spectrum progressing from more orderly to less orderly or to pure disorder in the text in terms of cultural power, used here in Ann Swindler’s sense—i.e. how “actors use culture in creative ways to forward their own interests in a system of unequal power, but the effect of that struggle is to reproduce the basic structure of the system” (Swindler, 1995:30). This called for the utilization of the pPluridisciplianry approach that helped me to mix linguistics and mathematicsal approaches: more precisely, Linguistic Presupposition and Fractal Methodology. Before discussing all of these aspects and the results generated from the MATLAB computer runs, it makes sense to briefly examine a sample of the existing works on the book to give the reader a sense of what previous scholars thought about it.

A Review of a Sample of the Book Reviews

As I stated earlier, Falola’s A Mouth Sweeter than Salt has been cited in at least 48 scholarly sources. As I also mentioned, more than half a dozen scholarly book reviews have been written on it. The following is a look at a sample of the book reviews in the chronological order in which they were published.

Jan Vansina (2005) argues that Falola’s memoir is unconventional for this type of genre, for it is more delightful than that. According to him, the autobiography is a “cornucopia of stories told with the salt of irony and the mouth of wisdom” of a master storyteller. Since the memoir recreates people and things past, he says that it is not just literature to be enjoyed solely for its own sake, as it is a literary masterwork. Despite its deceiving appearance, he insists, the autobiography is definitely “an African memoir: a memoir about growing up in Ibadan and gradually discovering the world, a memoir of the social history of the city of Ibadan between 1953 and 1966, and above all a memoir about the acquisition of identity.” The main plot, posits Vansina, is about the metamorphoses Falola gradually underwent to emerge as a Yoruba teenager.

According to J. Charles Taylor (2006), in A Mouth Sweeter than Salt, Falola introduces images geared toward revealing the growing impact that foreign cultures would havehad on the Africa of his childhood. Falola does this, says Taylor, by illustrating the experiences of his early life with images of contrast and duality—, thereby crafting a memoir effectively revealing the confluence of multiple heritages in the emerging Africa of the mid-20th Century. Taylor points out that Falola examines wWestern colonialism’s effect on iIndependent Africa by writing about this historical interaction from his own perspective. Taylor adds that as Falola relates his story as a youth struggling to create a sense of purpose in his life, he applies his sense of “existential wanderlust” to a space and time that is uncommon to many other memoirs: i.e. post-colonial Africa. Thus, Taylor posits, Falola’s autobiography serves as a memoir not only of a young African, but also of a young and “deflowered” continent being raped by wWestern entrepreneurs pushing for economic advantage.

For Ikhide R. Ikheloa (2008), Falola’s autobiography is an evocative narrative of his childhood in Yorubaland and a navigation of a mystical labyrinth of a world that will never exist. The closest book with richness and depth that Ikheloahe could remember , according to Ikheloa, is Wole Soyinka’s Ake: The Years of Childhood. But, as Ikheloa insists, Falola’s autobiography is not so much a memoir but a “rollicking history lesson told by Falola with all his might.” If he were a dictator, opines Ikheloa, he would decree that every African must buy and read the book. As Ikheloa adds colorfully, “Falola employs a folksy narrative richly spiced with Yoruba parables and sayings; the audience is seated stitched to seats, rapt in attention…His narrative weaves in some metaphysics and playful hints of Soyinka-esque ruminations emerge.”

Annie Gagiano (2008) points out that while Falola narrates his own childhood experience, he at the same time evokes the birth and early growth of a brilliantly perceptive historian. She observes that Falola’s autobiography is a history of a beloved and influential city, Ibadan, and almost incidentally a history of Nigeria’s economic and political transition, as he shifts from an inner-city location to the city’s outskirts as a boy, and the closer connection with “peri-urban” village life in the primarily Yoruba city of Ibadan, which allows a gradual expansion and deepening comprehension of familial and regional cultural practices and personages at the time when colonial rule was coming to an end and Nigeria was establishing its iIndependence. She notes that the??? exhibited in the young Falola’s fascinated gaze and unforgettably recorded in his maturity are both hybrid and powerful, persistent cultural and spiritual practices. Consequently, she adds, each chapter in Falola’s memoir “moves from observation to mediation, the first considering the importance and the many different meanings of ‘Time and Season.’”

According to Matthew M. Heaton (2008), in A Mouth Sweeter than Salt, Falola describes his environment and adventures growing up in Ibadan during the 1950s and 1960s—a time when British colonial dominance was waning and Nigeria was establishing an independent government. Heaton argues that although the autobiography is subtitled An African Memoir, it is more than a childhood remembered; it is a childhood pondered. He points out that the ideas conveyed in the memoir hinged upon what Falola had developed in the years since the events described in the text took place. In order to do this, according to Heaton, Falola had to layer approaches from several academic disciplines in order to communicate broadly, yet in a compartmentalized manner, the environment in which he grew up. As a result, adds Heaton, Falola paints a vivid portrait of the complicated interplay between tradition and modernity in post-colonial Nigeria through the process of a youth trying to acculturate himself into a rapidly changing society.

And fFinally, for Friederike Knabe (2011), A Mouth Sweeter than Salt is a rich and innovative memoir that combines Falola’s personal experiences during that time with events in his community and Nigeria as whole. She notes that the memoir provides the reader with a vivid insight into the a complex society and its intricate traditions, particularly those of the Yoruba culture. She states that Falola writes with an easy, accessible style, often addressing the reader directly, and demonstrates his narrative skill and ability to impart local events with gracefulness and humor. She posits that by interweaving sayings into his narrative, Falola demonstrates how the use of proverbs, idioms, and traditional imagery has remained part of everyday discourse. While the chapters stand as independent stories or essays, she adds, they flow together easily as a portrait of a person in his space and time.

Indeed, the preceding reviews shed a great deal of light on Falola’s autobiography. But as I stated earlier, none of them is systematic in its analysis of the text; by doing so, the present essay seeks to fill this gap.

Research Methodology

The major challenge for me in this analysis was how to transform the linguistic pragmatic or deep-level meanings in Falola’s literary text for mathematical modeling. As I stated earlier, this called for the utilization of a pluridisciplianry approach that helped me to mix linguistics and mathematicsal approaches: more precisely, Linguistic Presupposition and Fractal Methodology. Before analyzing the results generated after the MATLAB computer runs, it makes sense to begin with brief descriptions of Pluridiciplinary Methodology, Linguistic Presupposition as the unit of analysis, and Fractal Methodology. The following subsections are descriptions of these techniques.

Pluridiciplinary Methodology

Pluridisciplinary Methodology can be generally defined as the systematic utilization of two or more disciplines or branches of learning to investigate a phenomenon, thereby in turn contributing to those disciplines. Noting that Cheikh Anta Diop had called on African-centered researchers to become pluridisciplinarians, Clyde Ahmed Winters (1998) states that a pluridisciplinary specialist is a person who is qualified to employ more than one discipline—for example, history, linguistics, etc.—when researching aspects of African history and Africology in general.

The history of the Pluridisciplinary Methodology can be traced back to the mid-1950s with the works of Cheikh Anta Diop and Jean Vercoutter. The approach was concretized by Alain Anselin and Clyde Ahmad Winters in the 1980s and early 1990s. A brief history of this development with brief backgrounds of these four pioneers is retold in the rest of this section.

G. Mokhtar, in his book, Ancient Civilizations of Africa (1990), traces the development of Pluridisciplinary Methodology to the works of Diop and Vercoutter. Diop was born in Senegal on December 29, 1923 and died on February 7, 1986. He was a historian, anthropologist, physicist, and politician who investigated the origins of the human races and pre-colonial African culture. His education included African history, Egyptology, linguistics, anthropology, economics, and sociology. He is considered one of the greatest African intellectuals of the 20th cCentury. Jean Vercoutter was born in France on January 6, 1911 and died on July 6, 2000. He was a French Egyptologist.

According to Mokhtar, Diop and Vercoutter were in total agreement on the point that it is necessary to study as much detail as possible all the genes bordering on the Nile Valley which that were likely to provide fresh information. Mokhtar notes that Vercoutter considered it necessary to give due weight to the palaeoecology of the Delta and to the vast region which that had been termed by other researchers the "Fertile African Crescent." Mokhtar points out that Diop advocated tracing the paths taken by peoples who migrated westwards from Dārfur, reaching the Atlantic seaboard by separate routes, to the south along the Zaïre Valley and to the north towards Senegal, on either side of the Yoruba. He adds that Diop also pointed out how worthwhile it might be to study Egypt’s relations with the rest of Africa in greater detail than had been done, and Diop further mentioned the discovery, in the province of Shaba, of a statuette of Osiris dating from the 7th cCentury before the Christian era. Similarly, argues Mokhtar, a general study might be made of the working hypothesis that the major events which that affected the Nile, such as the sacking of Thebes by the Syrians, or the Persian invasion of -522, had far reaching repercussions on the African continent as a whole (Mokhtar, 1990:55).