This 2007 novel by Masha Hamilton stirred some debate in my Book Group, mostly over whether pre-literate cultures should be left alone so they can preserve their traditional way of life or whether individuals in those cultures could benefit from access to the opportunities that literacy and formal education can provide in a global society.
Afterwards, I went back to see if I could find a basis for claiming that the novel itself takes a position one way or the other.
The novel does not romanticize the experience of living "close to nature." Its opening chapter dramatizes the attack of a hyena on a toddler in Northeastern Province, Kenya, leaving the child severely disfigured for life. Throughout the novel, the local nomadic tribe in Mididima struggles with hunger and the fear of an oncoming drought. Yet, the tribe and its traditional ways have survived for much longer than most human societies, much as the ubiquitous mosquitoes, referenced in headings before each of the six parts of the book, have survived since long before homo sapiens appeared.
A good case can be made that the novel supports the decision of the tribal leaders to move away from the camel bookmobile, a lending library run by a white, American woman librarian from Brooklyn. Just as the coming drought threatens the physical survival of the tribe, the coming of literacy and exposure to Western culture threatens the survival of tribal traditions. Yet, the American librarian has formed human bonds with members of the tribe, including a romantic bond with a male teacher, whose wife wants a divorce so she can marry someone else. The librarian offers educational opportunities to a young girl who longs to see the outside world and to that disfigured boy who shows a remarkable artistic talent that only the American librarian seems to recognize and value.
The conflict between tradition and change is a major theme of the novel. In the end it seems that tradition wins out, as the American librarian is left grieving the loss of the tribe that has moved away. Yet the seeds of literacy and exposure to the outside world have been planted, and the reader senses that the internal tribal struggle between tradition and change will continue, whether the camel bookmobile finds the tribe in its new location or not.
And so I concluded that the novel takes an ambivalent stance in the debate over preservation of tradition vs. openness to change. For every loss of tradition, there is the possibility of gain in the embrace of new ideas and practices. For every gain in individual and social opportunity there is the loss of traditional stability and cultural cohesion.
The triumph of tradition at the end of the novel is temporary. Change is inevitable and will overtake the tribe eventually. When that happens there will be losses to grieve, but there will also be gains to celebrate.
Wow, this does work. (somehow I've had trouble posting a comment.) I struggle with this question, and one can stay home in this country, and think about the Native Americans. I think encroachment, for good or evil, will come. The Anishinabee (sp here!!, i.e. the former Ojibwa) who call themselves "first people" probably displaced firster peoples. Population and exploration will do this. So I see this as inevitable, and beyond approval or disapproval., more a question of how it comes about. A bookmobile seems fairly innocent, if displacement or blending is going to come. An alternative is war. In many respects even in this country we are currently torn between the idea that we are a melting pot or batches of mini countries (e.g. Spanish, or Chinatown or even African-American-ness.) But even if this type of overtaking (whether by blending or force ) of cultures is inevitable in my mind, it's important to let it not be implicit--to be open about what one is doing, and open to criticism and discussion; to be aware of potential risks. Such as your blog. But the issue is big--one might generalize this to US war abroad. If I had to disapprove of the bookmobile (and sorry, haven't read the book), I'd be disapproving of education. I'm not, but I'm critical of how it's done. Lots of love, s
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment, Sandy. I think some in our group were reacting to the history of Western imperialism and colonialism, but would probably agree that some forms of contact are more or less innocent. I'm not sure it follows that literacy leads to destruction of oral culture. We still have a rich oral culture in the West, though in our high tech world, it probably gets recorded one way or another fairly quickly. I guess I don't see why oral culture cannot survive along with the growth of print culture. As a former English prof, I'm all for literacy! Though it's good to be "literate" in oral culture as well.
ReplyDeleteMasha Hamilton is on Twitter! She responded to my blog post as follows: "Thanks for insightful commentary on The Camel Bookmobile. I really was writing into the gray areas, which your essay reflects." That's the coolest thing that's happened to me on Twitter or on the blog.
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