Poetic Explorations in Bill F. Ndi’s Worth Their Weight in Thorns: (De)Constructing Hegemonic National Integr National Integration and Debating F ation and Debating Francophonecentric National Go ancophonecentric National Governance. ernance.
Date
2021
Authors
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Publisher
Purdue University Press
Abstract
This paper explores “hegemonic national integration” and “Francophonecentric national
governance” in The Cameroons (TC) poetic scape. The former refers to La République du Cameroun
(LRC)-British Southern Cameroons (BSC) or Southern Cameroons (SC) interconnectedness dominated
by Francophones. The latter is governance that promotes a Francophone cultural superiority that
refuses to see the Cameroonian world through Southern Cameroonians’ eyes. Cameroonians live in a
time of enormous fragmenting “Francophonizing” and “Anglophonizing” processes. To flesh this
argument out, this paper borrows critical perspectives from Benhabib’s “democratic iterations” and
“deliberative democracy” and Rosenau’s “six-governance typology’ as requisites for good governance.
It contends that “hegemonic national integration” and “Francophonecentric national governance” are
pervasive features of Bill Ndi’s poetry. Indeed, SC literature of the anti-Francophoncentrism kind such
as Nkengasong’s Across the Mongolo, Besong’s Disgrace, Nyamnjoh’s Souls Forgotten, etc., has not
been recognized. For demonstrative purposes, focus will be on Ndi’s Worth their Weight in Thorns, a
glaring example of such works. TC in which the poems are set is ruled by a power-drunk elite and
characterized by socioeconomic and politico-cultural marginalization which is symptomatic of
“hegemonic national (dis)integration” and “Francophonecentric national governance”. In TC, national
integration and governance have become a kind of postcolonial re-racialization because the disparities
between the wealthy/powerful Francophones and the poor/powerless Southern Cameroonians possess
something akin to the racial character being witnessed in the USA. Consequently, reading Ndi’s
collection from this perspective reveals the ongoing rivalry between the dominant LRC and the
dominated SC as a stellar representation of a master-servant relationship
Description
Research Article
Keywords
“hegemonic national integration", Poetic Explorations