Second Class Citizen (novel)
Author | Buchi Emecheta |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Literary fiction |
Publisher | Allison & Busby |
Publication date | 1974 |
Publication place | Nigeria |
Media type | |
Pages | 174 |
ISBN | 978-0-8076-1128-9 |
Preceded by | In the Ditch |
Followed by | The Bride Price |
Second Class Citizen is a 1974 novel by Nigerian writer Buchi Emecheta. It was published in London by Allison and Busby and subsequently in US in 1975 by George Braziller. Often described as a semi-autibiography, it entails the story of Adah, the major book character, Nigerian woman who overcomes strict tribal domination of women and countless setbacks to achieve an independent life for herself and her children. She moved from Nigeria to London, where she faced hard living conditions and a violent marriage to Francis. The novel explores the themes of gender and marriage, religion and immigration.
Plot summary
[edit]Adah is a black Nigerian girl from the Ibo part of the country. She is from Ibuza and lives in Lagos. She dreams of moving to the United Kingdom. After her father dies, Adah is sent to live with her uncle's family. She goes to school in Nigeria and attained employment working for the American consulate as a library clerk. The compensation from the job is enough to make her a desirable bride for Francis.
Francis travels to the United Kingdom with the help of Adah to study law. She was the breadwinner of her family and her husband's family. Adah convinces her husband's family that she and the children also belong in the UK. Francis believes they are second-class citizens in the United Kingdom as they are not citizens of the country. Adah finds employment working for another library and pays for their expenses, while also providing primary care for their children.
Critical reception
[edit]Second Class Citizen is well regarded as a story of overcoming struggle and of contemporary African life.[1] On the novel's publication in 1974, Hermione Harris wrote in Race & Class: "Of the scores of books about race and black communities in Britain that had appeared during the 1960s and early 1970s, the great majority are written by white academic ultimately concerned with the relationship between white society and black 'immigrants'. Few accounts have emerged from those on the receiving end of British racism or liberalism of their own black experience. On the specific situation of black women there is almost nothing. Second Class Citizen is therefore something of a revelation."[2]
A new edition of the book was published for the Penguin Modern Classics series in October 2020, after many years of being out of print. John Self in The Guardian wrote that, despite being on Granta's Best of Young British Novelists list in 1983, in subsequent years Emecheta "...didn't get the column inches. So it's a late justice that she is one of the few Granta alumni, alongside Martin Amis and Shiva Naipaul, to be promoted to the Penguin Modern Classics list."[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Walker, Alice, "A Writer Because of, Not in Spite of, Her Children," in Ms. (© 1975 Ms. Magazine Corp.), Vol. IV, No. 7, January 1976, pp. 40, 106.
- ^ Harris, Hermione, "Book Reviews: Second Class Citizen by Buchi Emecheta (London, Allison and Busby, 1974)", Race & Class (Institute of Race Relations), Vol. 16, issue 4, 1 April 1975, pp. 433–435. Via Sage Journals.
- ^ Self, John (31 October 2021). "Second-Class Citizen by Buchi Emecheta review – fresh and timeless". The Observer. Retrieved 28 December 2021.