Episode #1028
Achebe, Ghazal, Christenberry
Friday, July 10, 2009
"Things Fall Apart." Kurt Andersen asks Chinua Achebe, whose novel is a cornerstone of modern African literature, to reflect on his legacy. We’ll hear from one of Achebe’s successors, the acclaimed Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Her new book of stories "The Thing Around Your Neck" is just out. And we take a look at how the late Andy Kaufman set the stage for today’s cutting-edge comedians -- like Sacha Baron Cohen, the performer of Borat and the new Bruno.
Chinua Achebe
He has been called the father of a generation of writers. First published at the dawn of Nigeria’s independence, Things Fall Apart has been translated into 50 languages, has sold 10 million copies, and is required reading in countless schools. Kurt Andersen asks Achebe if his novel foreshadowed ...
Things Fall Apart
In this excerpt from Things Fall Apart, readers get a glimpse of Igbo life in Nigeria before the Europeans arrive to establish colonial institutions. Read by WNYC's evening host Terrance McKnight.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Chimamanda Adichie is an award-winning Nigerian author whose writing has brought Nigerian history to global audiences. She explains the role Achebe has played in her work, and what it is like being compared to such an eminent figure. Produced by David Krasnow and
Ghazal
For hundreds of years, musicians from India and Pakistan have taken the poetry called ghazal and set it to music. The songs project such deep longing that you don’t need to know Urdu to feel the pain. Produced by Rob Weisberg.
Bonus Track: "Soch Ka"
Kiran Ahluwalia's "Soch Ka" from her latest album Wanderlust.
Andy Kaufman Comes of Age
Decades before Borat and Bruno, Andy Kaufman bewildered audiences with a blend of comedy and performance art that involved staying in character beyond the walls of the TV studio. Finally the world has caught up with Kaufman's genius. Eric Molinsky connects the dots.
William Christenberry
William Christenberry returns every year to Alabama to chronicle the slowly morphing rural landscape of his childhood: faded barns, kudzu-covered buildings, and a certain old barbecue joint. He explains how he avoids cliches while capturing familiar images of the South.





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