Ghosts
Ghosts
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The Thing Around Your Neck and Half of a Yellow Sun among others. Her story
'Ghost' was published in The Thing Around Your Neck a collection of her short
stories that was published in 2009.
Title
'Ghosts'
The topic is metaphorically used to represent several things: The terrible memories
that most people are living with or haunted by. Most people have memories of
horrible previous experiences that disturb them. For instance, Ikenna struggles with
the loss of his family and his failure to succeed in the Biafran Civil War. Prof James
struggles with the loss of his daughter, the destruction of property, the loss of the
University's glory, and the loss of his wife.
Some people were thought dead but turned up alive such as Ikenna. The truly dead
but whose spirits visit their loved ones — Ebere -they offer consolation to the
bereaved.
CHARACTERS
He is the protagonist in the story, and the story is told through his voice. He is the
narrator of the story.
He escaped Nsukka when the civil war broke in 1967 and fled to America.
He loses his daughter Zik in the war but gets another daughter (Nkiru) while still in
America when he was a lecturer at Berkeley.
He is constantly visited by the ghost of his late wife and has not disclosed this to his
daughter Nkiru.
b. Ikenna Okoro
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He is a man who was thought to have died in the 1967 Biafran war. During his
university lecturing days in the sociology department, he was a renowned activist.
He escaped the Biafran civil war on a Red Cross plane and went to Sweden, where
he has lived since 1967.
c. Vincent
He served Prof. James in the eighties when he was the faculty dean.
He is now retired and is following up on his pension, just like Prof and other
retirees.
He is seen as a concerned and caring person who always minded about the welfare
of Prof.James' daughter.
d. Ebere
She is the dead wife of Prof. James Nwoye, who appears to him as a ghost. During
her time, she portrays some generosity as she would give her daughters old clothes
to Vincent for his children. (Satire - giving old clothes)
She has been a caring wife who encouraged James to care for his lovely skin.
SYNOPSIS
Like the title suggests, Chimamanda's story "Ghost" mainly dwells on how people
face and deal with past ghosts, thus informing their present and future. Professor
James Nwoye currently lives in a corrupt part of Nigeria where the medical field
provides people with counterfeit drugs.
They associate the failure to get their retirement benefits to the corruption of the
education minister or the University's vice- chancellor.
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Prof James chats for a while with his former driver Vincent who is to survive the
harsh times serving as a cobbler around the university hostel. Vincent inquires
about Nkiru (Prof. James' daughter who lives in America), and James informs him
that she is well. The suffering of the people is highlighted in their appearance and
hunger. One of the men gathered under a tree requests Prof to buy them bananas
as hunger was killing them. Even as he buys them bananas, Prof ironically observes
that what they needed was some moisturiser to soften their skin. After leaving the
group, Prof. James meets with Ikenna Okoro; a man thought to be long dead. rlhe
encounter shocked Prof as he believed that Ikenna, a former colleague and a
renowned activist, had died in the Biafran civil war on July 6 1967. When he initially
saw him, he thought of throwing sand at him, which was what people do to ghosts.
However, his education and the fact that he was walking on concrete grounds
prevent him from doing it. The encounter between the two drives Prof down
memory lane. He remembers their days at the University where Ikena rebelled
when asked to put on ties.
Ikenna discloses that he escaped Biafra that day on a Red Cross plane that took him
to Sweden. He painfully explains that he saw no need to return after the war since
all his family was killed when Orlu was bombed.
On his part, Prof James went to America with his wife Ebere but came back in 1970
when the civil war ended. However, they were devastated to find everything in their
home destroyed, and their piano was missing. They thus returned to America and
only returned to Nsukka in 1976. When Ikenna inquires about their daughter Zik,
Prof painfully answers in Igbo that the war took her. He, however, tells him that they
got another daughter after the war—the two talk about life during and after the
war, with each mentioning their worst moments.
Ikenna asks Prof James about his wife Ebere, and James replies that she died three
years ago. He tells him that she visits him. Ikenna appears surprised at the
disclosure, so James corrects himself and says that Ebere visited America quite
often since their daughter works there as a doctor. Knowing that Ikenna is educated
just like him, James knows that Ikenna does not believe in ghosts. He, too, never
believed in them until his wife visited him three weeks after the burial.
The two talk about the situation ever since the war ended and how things have
significantly changed. They point out at the rot in the University — where instead of
teaching, people are playing politics and instead of reading and working hard;
students are buying grades either with money or their bodies.
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The corruption in the university offices does not escape them. James reports how
one Josephat Udeana, a vice chancellor for six years, ran the University like his
father's chicken coop leading to the disappearance of money and favouritism in
promoting workers. James notes that the current vice-chancellor is not any
different, thus why he is yet to get his retirement benefits.
He further explains how people are bribing to have their years before retirement
added since nobody wants to retire. Ikenna raises the sensitive topic about fake
drugs. It triggers painful memories in James since his wife Ebere is thought to have
died because of counterfeit drugs. James dismissively says that counterfeit drugs
are horrible in efforts to avoid this topic.
He parts ways with Ikenna after telling him how he has been 'resting' ever since he
retired. He extends an invitation to Ikenna to join him in his home, but Ikenna turns
it down.
Once in his home, Prof. James turns on the TV and remembers how a man accused
ofimporting fake drugs had justified this act through a TV interview on NTA. The
man had explained that his drugs do not kill people but only fail to cure their illness.
He wonders why news about Ikenna being alive never came up, yet there were
various other stories of the 'living ghosts'- people thought to be dead but turned up
alive. The tale ends with Prof. James in his study hoping that his daughter Nkiru will
call to tell him about their grandson, and if she does not, he will go to bed and
await the visit of Ebere.
Episodes
The retirees suffer frustration due to being denied their retirement benefits. When
the story opens, Prof James is at the University Bursary to ask about his pension,
which he has been following up for some time.-"l was there to ask about my
pension, yet again." (pg.57) He is, however, frustrated when the clerk tells him the
money has not yet come.
Prof is not alone. Several other retirees are clustered under the flame tree, filled
with similar frustration. Out of frustration, they curse the vice-chancellor who is said
to have stolen the money meant for their pension: "His Children will not have
children He will die of diarrhoea." (pg.58).
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We also see that these people suffer from poverty. The encounter between Prof and
his former driver, Vincent, points to the poor living condition of the people. Vincent
has been forced to work as a cobbler to earn a living. He complains about the
failure of the students in the hostels to pay him on time for mending their shoes (pg.
58).
The description of Vincent's current physical appearance also shows that he has
lived through tough times. Although he was younger than Prof, he looked older with
only a little hair left pg 58.
The plea of one of the men to Prof to buy them bananas shows the suffering that
the people have gone through. The man tells Prof, "Hunger is killing us" (pg.58).
These people cannot afford decent meals for themselves. Ironically, Prof observes
that they need more moisturiser since their faces and arms look like ash (pg. 58).
The civil war also causes the suffering of many. Many people suffer trauma (ghosts
of the past) due to the war. Prof James lost his daughter Zik to the war (pg. 61).
The people's suffering is further captured when Prof James wonders why he had not
heard about Ikenna not having died. He notes that people evaded the topic of war
and memories of what they had gone through during the war. "But we hardly talked
about the war When we did, it was with an implacable vagueness, as if what
mattered were not that we had crouched in muddy bunkers during air raids after
which we buried corpses with bits of pink on their charred skin, not that we had
eaten cassava peels and watched our children's bellies swell from malnutrition, but
we had survived" pg. 66
Corruption
The explanation why Prof James and other retirees have not received their pension
is due to corruption. Ihe men clustered under the flame tree say, "The Education
Minister has stolen the pension money... it was the vice-chancellor who had
deposited the money in high interest personal accounts." ( pg.58).
In the University, corruption is further seen where James tells Ikenna about Josephat
Udeana, the great dancer, who, once chosen as vice-chancellor, perpetuated
corruption at the University's high office. "Josephat was vice chancellor for six years
and ran this University like his father's chicken Money disappeared, and then we
would see new cars coop stamped with the names of foreign foundations that did
not exist." (pg.64)
He also dictated who would be promoted and who would not. The situation did not
change after Josephat left since even the current vice-chancellor is also said to
follow the corrupt route faithfully.
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corruption is also reported in the Personnel Services Department, where lecturers
who do not want to retire bribe, someone, to have some years added to them (pg.
64).
Further, corruption is seen among university students. Prof tells Ikenna that instead
of reading and working hard to earn fair grades, the university students have
bought grades with money or their bodies (pg. 64).
The Biafran Civil war that the story highly relies on has significant negative
implications on the people:
Pro James Nwoye lost his daughter Zik to the war (pg. 61). Ikenna lost the whole of
his family to the war, thus the reason he has lived in Sweden ever since. He tells
Prof, "My whole family was in Orlu when they bombed it. Nobody left, so there was
no reason for me to come back." (pg. 61)
A great genius - Chris Okigbo, also died in the war Nsukka lost a great mind - a star
whose poetry moved everybody. His prowess is compared to that of a colossus;
thus, a significant loss for the people page 62.
• Displacement of people and separation of loved ones When the civil war started
on July 6, 1967, the people had to evacuate Nsukka in a hurry Prof James and his wife
Ebere moved to America while Ikenna moved to Sweden using Red Cross planes
(pg. 61).
Prof James and his daughter live separately due to the war. His American born
daughter Nkiru is a doctor in America while James lives in Nsukka. He feels that the
war has denied him an opportunity to teach his grandson the Igbo language and the
culture (pg. 67).
Destruction/Loss of property
After the civil war ended in 1970, Prof James and Ebere returned to Nsukka from
America. They were, however, disappointed to find some of their properties having
been destroyed and others missing. "Our books were in a charred pile in the front
garden. . the lumps of calcified faeces in the bathtub were strewn with pages of my
mathematical annals, used as toilet paper, crusted smears blurring the formulas I
had studied and taught Our piano - Ebere's piano was gone. our photographs were
ripped, their frames broken." (pg. 61)
On their way home that day, Prof James and Ebere saw a landscape of ruins, blown-
out roofs and houses riddled with holes, injuries, and physical pain (pg. 62).
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The day Prof James and Ebere drove back to Nsukka, Biafran soldiers stopped them
and shoved a wounded soldier into their car, and his blood dripped onto the
backseat of their vehicle (pg. 62).
Counterfeit/fake drugs
fie selling of expired medicine is the current plague in the country Ikenna tells
James that he has been reading about fake drugs in the papers (pg. 65).
The effect of fake drugs has been felt by James, whose wife Ebere's death is linked
to the counterfeit drug deal. Prof James thinks that Ikenna must have heard of 'How
Ebere had lain in the hospital getting weaker and weaker, how her doctor had been
puzzled that she was not recovering after her medication how none of us knew until
it was too late that the drugs were useless' (pg. 65).
In addition, Prof James bitterly remembers how he had watched some broadcast of
an interview on NTA. Through the interview, a man accused of importing fake drugs
- typhoid fever drugs, had defended himself by claiming that his drugs do not kill
people but only fail to cure illness (pg. 66).
Prof James is presented as an individual struggling with ghosts from his past. The
illusion of his wife's return like a ghost is one of the mechanisms he adopts to deal
with his terrible past. It is an attempt to deal with the absence of Ebere and the
devastating effects of war. The freshness of the memories of war is brought out
through the many flashbacks used by the writer. One of the flashbacks captures the
day the civil war arose (pg. 60). Another shows the return to Prof and Ebere to
Nsukka in 1970 (pg. 61-62). By remembering these events, Prof James shows that the
memories of the war are still deeply etched in his thoughts.
Essay Questions
1) Society today is filled with many evils that cause suffering to others. Support
this from Chimamanda Adichie's 'Ghost'
2) War has devastating effects and thus should be avoided at all cost Using
illustrations from 'Ghosts' by Chimamanda Adichie
3) Many individuals struggle with ghosts from their past Show how true this
assertion is based on 'Ghosts' by Chimamanda Adichie.
Questions on styles
1. How effectively has the writer used flashbacks in the story 'Ghosts,
2. The dialogue between Prof James and Ikenna carries the critical messages in the
story. Is it true?
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3. The higher learning education sector is satirised in the story. Show how this is
achieved.
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