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Title: Heart of the Ngoni Heroes Afri by Harold Courlander, Ousmane Sako ISBN: 0-517-54637-X Publisher: Random House Value Pub Pub. Date: 12 December, 1988 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 |
Average Customer Rating: 4 (1 review)
Rating: 4
Summary: Engrossing, enlightening, and occasionally disturbing
Comment: This is a collection stories from the Malian kingdom of Segou that date back in most cases a few centuries. Harold Courlander and Ousmane Sako did an extraordinary job with the translation: it reads almost like a piece of modern fiction, but retains some of the original poetry of the Bambara language from which it was adapted.
The tales themselves deal mostly with heroes: children born to noble destinies, chiefs leading their armies into battle, and adventurers out to make names for themselves. These heroes are exclusively men; while there are some notable women characters, in most cases they couldn't be considered role models. I was impressed with the Bambara traditions of ancient warfare: when one village wanted to attack another, for example, its army showed up a day ahead of time to announce its intentions. The two armies would then spend the night drinking and feasting together, and the following morning would line up for battle outside the village gates. Honor was paramount, and these stories recount time and again great leaders who sacrificed countless followers' lives for the sake of honor.
That's one of the disturbing aspects of these stories. Another is the characters' unshakeable belief in destiny. Mystics and diviners are frequently consulted to reveal the future, and if they say that a boy will become a king, or will die young, then there is no getting around it. None of these characters questions his foretold destiny, nor does anyone surpass expectations. Bambara was rigidly structured not just by caste and clan, nobility and slave status, but also by a universal faith in fortune tellers.
Anyone seeking a faithful and engaging perspective into a pre-colonial Malian society will find "Heart of the Ngoni" very helpful. It treats the same region and era as Maryse Conde's "Segu" novels, but without the potboiler plot devices, and I suspect it to be a much more accurate portrayal of life in Segou than Conde's books were. If you can leave aside any reservations about predestination and the "great man" theory of history, these tales will entice you.
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