Showing posts with label robbery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robbery. Show all posts

Civil Peace, by Chinua Achebe


 Audiobook

Analysis

Deep analysis

BIOGRAPHY

Chinua Achebe was born in 1930 in Ogidi, a city in the South East of Nigeria, the region that for a short period of time was Biafra. He was an Igbo, one of the multiple ethnicities of Nigeria. His father was a protestant missionary (one of Chinua’s first books was Pilgrim’s Progress, by John Bunyan). His family were decidedly pro-British while Nigeria was a British colony, even as they were poor –they lived in a zinc house. Chinua was baptised Albert, after Queen Victoria’s Consort. When he discovered what colonization was really about, he became anti-colonialist and changed his name to Chinua, which in Igno means “prayer”.

During the decolonisation in the 1960s, Biafra declared its independence from Nigeria, and a civil war ensued. Chinua fought for Biafra, but the state lasted only three years. The civil war wasn’t only about the independence of a region: in Nigeria there had been several coups d’état and massacres between ethnicities, mainly between Hausa people, Muslims, in the North, and Igbo people, Christians, in the South.

He studied at a Nigerian University and then he worked as a college teacher.

Politics and politicians with their corruption disappointed him, and he emigrated to the USA, where he taught at some universities. He went back to Nigeria for some time, to return to the USA for good, where he died at the age of 82.

His most famous book was Things Fall Apart, in 1958, written in English, although his mother tongue was Igbo. For this book, he was called the father of African literature.

He won the Man Book International Prize in 2009 and he was awarded the Dorothy and Lilian Gish Prize with a very important sum of money for an art prize.

There is also an annual event related to him: the Chinua Achebe Literary Festival.

 

SUMMARY

This story takes place after the Biafra War, in 1970.

One of the main difficulties after a war is to restore the legal and social order, and that means to dissolve or assimilate the defeated army; or, at least, to collect all their weapons. In these circumstances, groups of soldiers go on fighting and resisting, or most usually they become bandits. So, sometimes stealing and fighting get mixed together, and eventually it is difficult to know if they are rebels or only bandits.

In our case, the protagonist of the story, Jonathan Iwegu, was happy because the war was finished, because he was discharged and now could go back home. He also felt lucky because he had come out sound and safe of the war, and with his wife and three of his four children also alive. And their house, almost just a cabin, was intact, although a big and modern building near it was destroyed by a bomb. Furthermore, he was able to recover his old bicycle.

He was an optimistic man, and in every unexpected situation, he uttered: “Nothing puzzles God”.

Using his bicycle as a taxi, he earned some money, and this bit of money was, for him and in these times, a small fortune. His little house needed some repairs, and with a few coins and a bit of help, he was able to fix it and leave it again like new. The children helped their family collecting and selling fruits, and the wife cooked some food for take-away breakfasts. They could even open a bar for soldiers: they prospered. And one day, he could change his Biafra money for the only now legal Nigerian money. He got twenty pounds. So all went extremely well. 

But that very night, some problem knocked at their door. It was a group of soldiers turned into robbers and they wanted Jonathan’s money. Jonathan and his family shouted for help, but nobody answered their call, although he was a good neighbour. The bandits insisted at the door knocking even louder and stronger. They threatened the family, yet they said they were “good” thieves, good people. They asked for a hundred pounds because they believed they were rich people. Eventually, after a negotiation, they agree to go away with the twenty pounds deo-gratia (or egg-rasher) Jonathan got that very day.

The next day the family went on with his daily routines as if nothing had happened.

Jonathan was an optimistic man.


QUESTIONS

-What do you know about Nigeria and Biafra?

-Jonathan’s favourite sentence for unexpected events was “Nothing puzzles God”. Do you have one of your own? What is it?

-If you miss some money: what would you prefer, that it was stolen from you, or that you lost it accidentally? Are there “good” robbers, or are all the robbers bad?

-Do you consider yourself an optimistic person, or rather a pessimistic one? Do you have a “cornerstone” to determine this quality in a person?


VOCABULARY

biro, rummaged, retailed, plane, palm-wine, windfall, sandpaper, demijohn


The Roads We Take, by O. Henry

Film (audio in Russian, subtitles in English)

Another movie (audio in English, no subtitles)

Audiobook

Summay and analysis

The Road Not Taken, by Robert Frost

The Road Not Taken, analysis

Hit the Road, Jack, by Ray Charles

SUMMARY
This is the story of an untrustworthy bandit, "Shark" Dodson.
He and two mates more, John Big Dog and Bob Tidball, robbed a train. In the fray of the attack, John Big Dog was shot dead by one of the train employees. The other two bandits ran away with a big booty of thirty thousand dollars, and happier they were because now they were only two to divide the amount: there wasn’t a third in the party.

They got to the place where they had left their horses and set John Big Dog’s horse free. Then they mount and went away as fast as they could. But during their flight, Bob Tidball’s horse broke its leg, and they had to kill the brute. So now they were two robbers, their booty and only a horse; in consequence, their escape was a bit more difficult, but not impossible. However, Shark Dodson decided that two people were too many people for a horse, and got rid of Bob Tidball murdering him in cold blood to secure his flight and to keep all the money for him only, even though Bob had been a staunch friend of his.

Some years later, we find Dodson  turned on a very respectable rich man with his own company. He had also friends, the  best one of them, Williams, with a big number of shares in Dodson’s company. But all of a sudden, there was a financial crisis, and Williams was on the point of losing all his money. He went to Dodson to ask for help, and Dodson…

 

QUESTIONS

Do you think everyone gets what he deserves in this world? Do you have any example (real or fictional)?

Do you think it’s possible to go up in society and become very rich following strictly legal and ethical ways?

Think about case of betrayal you know and tell us about it, as if it were a story (about love, politics, money…) Do you know any case in which treachery could be justified?

In a moment, Dodson said that he had a most remarkable dream. Do you think it's possible that the first part of the story was only a dream?


 

 

VOCABULARY
quarter-breed, pieces of ordnance, tender, ore, through the mill, currency, conductor, unwittingly, chaparral, pommel, primeval, spryest, posse, haul, sorrel, bottom, cards and spades, desperado, crowbait, boodle, hit the trail, timber, spoil, hitting the breeze, pards, vamoose, cupidity, holders-up, upholstered