Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: A prominent Nigerian author
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is a smart and successful Nigerian author born in 1977 from Nigerian parents who worked at the university of Nssuka, Nigeria. Her newly-wed parents emigrated to California, USA to complete their studies for a few years before coming back to Nigeria in 1966. Adichie grew up in her homeland but as a young adult emigrated to the USA like her parents. She began studying medicine in Nigeria and then studied the humanities in Philadelphia and continued in Connecticut where she graduated and received several awards. She now teaches in Nigeria and the United States.
Literary works and achievements
Her first novel Purple Hibiscus, published in 2003, won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book in 2005. Thereafter she wrote two novels: Half of a Yellow Sun in 2006 and Americanah in 2013 plus numerous essays and a collection of short stories The Thing Around Your Neck. Furthermore she is well-known for her modern and creative mind ; she also released a TED talk about The Danger of a Single Story in which she questions the consequences of stereotypes of both fiction and real life.
Feminist advocacy and social impact
As a speaker of the famous TED talk We Should All Be Feminists in 2012, published in book form in 2015, she gives her own definition of what it means to be a feminist in the 21st century. She demonstrates that throughout the world boys and girls are raised differently because of gender stereotypes with tremendous consequences and she encourages everyone to give the same education to children whether boys or girls. She aims at empowering women and her goal is to build a fairer world with a happier all-inclusive society supporting authenticity.
Cultural influences and literary inspiration
Adichie's work was influenced by both Western and Nigerian culture ; when a child she loved reading English children's writer Enid Blyton but also Nigerian author Chinua Achebe's Things fall Apart, and Florence Buchi Emecheta, a Nigerian novelist who wrote about child slavery, female independence and freedom. Her works are also deeply impregnated with Nigerian culture and especially her native Igbo language.