Amos Tutuola The Palm Wine Drinkard Pdf

Amos Tutuola The Palm Wine Drinkard Pdf Rating: 6,9/10 9875 reviews

Amos Tutuola The Palm-Wine Drinkard Posted on March 17, 2008 in Book Reviews, Jason Weaver 7 Jason Weaver Aside from the transmogrified strangeness of folk and fairy tales, Amos Tutuolas 1952 novelThe Palm-Wine Drinkard is unlike almost anything else in print. Nebulous comparisons might be made with Ovids Metamorphoses, Kafkas inconclusive parables or Alice in Wonderland, but things behave very differently from even these european gargoyles in Tutuolas twilight world. I know nothing about the authors own relationship to Nigerian culture.

Amos Tutuola BORN: 1920, Abeokuta, Nigeria. DIED: 1997, Ibadan, Nigeria. NATIONALITY: Nigerian. GENRE: Fiction. MAJOR WORKS: The Palm-Wine Drinkard and His Dead Palm-Wine Tapster in the Deads’ Town (1952) My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (1954) Yoruba Folktales (1986) Amos Tutuola. Tutuola, Amos, photograph.

The palm wine drinkard summary

I would rather meet him as a stranger on the road, enchanting and a little spooky. What everyone knows is that David Byrne and Brian Eno named their album of bricolage and technological tribalism after Tutuolas second novel My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. Both claimed they had never actually read the book, but it would have been a wholly appropriate influence on Byrnes stop Making Sense lyrics and the circuit- breaking Eno. Every novel simulates a compact universe.

It sets the rules by which that existence operates and, to be successful on its own terms, it must adhere to these tacit laws. As an exception, Thomas Pynchons V exploits this by setting two wholly incompatible universes against one another, disrupting the coherence of narrative singularity through which most novels stage their rhetorical arguments. Fantasy stories, on the other hand, often unwittingly flout their own narrative coherence.

The Lord of the Rings wants it both ways. We are expected to surrender to the dramatic tension of classic narrative logic, where everything is at stake, where every act is terminal and can never be undone. The logic of Oedipus Rex is inexorable, the infernal machine as Cocteau called it. But when Frodo lies dying in The Lord of the Rings or as the Hobbits are surrounded by malevolence, the emotional charge is defused. A spell is invoked, time is reversed, the slate is wiped clean. This is as incompatible with relentless narrative as Pynchons and the fantasy story fails on both counts. What is so vital about The Palm-Wine Drinkard is Tutuolas absolute dedication to the fantastic.

All laws of the probable are flouted and everything is elastic. Details are hasty and sketched and sentences often end with a blunt etc. Things are most often described by the elements that mark them out, make them what they are. For brevity, places and things are named by their description: The Red-People in the Red Town or, rather wonderfully, The Skull as a Complete Gentleman. The latter is a bare cranium that hires body parts and a nicesuit and poses in the market place as a kind of Bryan Ferry in order to lure pretty young women.

Events are compressed, time collapses, a decade passes in a sentence. It is, appropriately, a drunken logic. The plot, such as it is, follows the eldest of eight children. His work, as he puts it, is to drink palm-wine. He is an expert and drinks 225 kegs of it a day.

Loose He cannot even drink plain water any more. The drinkard is supplied by a tapster who falls fatally from a tree and, because nobody can tap palm-wine as well as this character, the narrator sets off for Deads Town to find his posthumous incarnation. On the way, the drinkard finds up a wife, uses all kinds of juju and meets incredible characters such as The Invisible-Pawn, The Hungry-Creatureand The Faithful-Mother in the White Tree. Inside the White Tree is a kind of hotel-cum-hospital with a great ballroom. Scale is immaterial in the bush. It is like a mutilated episode of In the Night Garden or an adventure from The Mighty Boosh.

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The transmission of folk tales follows evolutionary principles. Oral traditions enforce that each retelling of a story will mutate it according to personal and local bias and that the most mnemonic elements will carry from one teller to the next.

Fantastic and grotesque details are the organizing DNA rather than psychological depth or moral reckoning. What is the use of a fairy tale? The briefest glance through the Brothers Grimm or Calvinos collection of Italian stories will demonstrate that happy ever after is only one strand of many different outcomes. Often stories will take delight in punishing the hero. These seem to be stories told for the sake of telling, for the sake of variation, imagination and invention.

Like turn of the evolutionary dice, folk tales are always tweaking the seeds. Tutuolas writing seems inherited from an oral background. It shares the same splashy colour, the incredible and the memorable. The Palm-Wine Drinkard is an intensely visual story, a vivid engagement with the imagination. One impossible to convey in any other medium, even anime. The sparseness of descriptive detail works on the reader, like a parasite working on the cortex to produce vivid hallucinations.