Chapter 3:
The Nigerian Nervous Conditions
The Transcript
Summary
I can trace the kernel of this chapter to February last year when I was asked this question by The Republic for their First Draft series: “The bulk of your work (as a writer, researcher, and visual artist) explores how Africans are making a living. Why is this important to you?” And I replied: “It is important because life can be very hard and a lot of us get really tired. I’d like for us to be less tired, or at least for us to not have to work through exhaustion and onslaughts against our nervous systems. But we often have to work through all of those because we lack security, social protection, secure means of livelihoods, homes where we can relax, strong community structures, or on the individual level compassionate senses of self.”
This episode is a reflection on alienation, catastrophe, random acts of violence, cognitive dissonance, self-denial, brain fag syndrome, and some of the -isms at the root of these Nigerian nervous conditions today.
Timestamps
01:57 Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions
05:03 Historical Context & Brain Fag Syndrome Education
07:55 Crisis of Meaning and Cognitive Dissonance
11:19 Alienation in Nigerian Society
15:09 Marx's Theory of Alienation
19:51 Understanding Nigeria's Political and Economic System
22:40 Catastrophe, Interminable and so, Interruptable
Full transcript to come.