Chinese of Africa
Stefan Asemota
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Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Medien, Kommunikation
Beschreibung
As the plane took off, I was leaving more than just my father. I was leaving behind the last bit of hope I had When the grief of losing a loved one hijacks his life, Stefan finds himself on a raw, unfiltered journey home with a father he barely knew, armed with nothing but questions and a desperate need to understand. The Chinese of Africa is a personal and sociopolitical memoir that explores Stefan's transformative journey through grief, cultural identity, and a critical examination of Nigeria's socioeconomic structure. Following the loss of his Swiss mother, Stefan accompanies his Nigerian father on a poignant return to his native land, seeking to bridge the emotional distance between them and understand the complex challenges facing contemporary Nigeria. His mother's death becomes the emotional catalyst propelling his journey of reconnection, both with his father and his father's homeland. Grief is portrayed not as a debilitating force but as a transformative experience that opens pathways to deeper understanding. He uses this personal pain to explore the African parenting culture that has traditionally made it difficult for sons to connect with their fathers. The Chinese of Africa is not just a travel memoir or a personal grief narrative but a sophisticated sociopolitical exploration of a man who shows the problems affecting his nation and his continent and how historical forces like slavery and colonisation continue to shape African societies. Stefan doesn't just describe problems affecting the Nigerian culture he tries to understand their roots and imagine workable solutions. He explains how complicated social rules make it hard for fathers and sons to truly understand each other. Growing up between two cultures gives him a unique view of Nigeria's challenges, and leveraging his personal stories and careful observation, he shows how family dynamics reflect larger social issues. Through his grief, hallucinations, poems, thoughts, personal experiences, and systemic analysis, Stefan offers a unique perspective about himself, his family, his mother, his nation, and Nigeria's complex societal landscape. He shows how personal stories can reveal larger truths about culture, identity, and growth. This book will hook you from the very first page to the last with its breathtaking, genre-defying exploration that shatters expectations. It is perfect for readers who crave memoirs from authors like Chris Whitaker, Alison Espach, and Leigh Bardugo.
Kundenbewertungen
Nigeria, Switzerland, Grief, Cultural identity, contemporary Nigeria, socioeconomic structure, sociopolitical memoir