Postcolonial Automobility

Car Culture in West Africa

2017
Author:

Lindsey B. Green-Simms

Globalizing the car’s role in modern culture

Through the lens of the automobile, Lindsey B. Green-Simms considers the pleasures, dangers, and limits of global modernity in West Africa. With readings of famous plays, novels, and films and recent popular videos, she reveals how automobility in the region is an everyday practice, an ethos, a fantasy of autonomy, and an affective activity intimately tied to modern social life.

Clear, lucid, and engaging. Lindsey B. Green-Simms does an excellent job mediating close literary analysis, broader historical and cultural focus on the car in Africa, and astute theoretical readings.

Marian Aguiar, Carnegie Mellon University

For more than a century cars have symbolized autonomous, unfettered mobility and an increasingly global experience. And yet, they are often used differently outside the centers of global capitalism. This pioneering book considers how, through the lens of the automobile, we can assess the pleasures, dangers, and limits of global modernity in West Africa. Through new and provocative readings of famous plays, novels, and films, as well as recent popular videos, Postcolonial Automobility reveals the surprising ways in which automobility in the region is, at once, an everyday practice, an ethos, a fantasy of autonomy, and an affective activity intimately tied to modern social life.

Lindsey B. Green-Simms begins with the history of motorization in West Africa from the colonial era to the decolonizing decades after World War II, and addresses the tragedy of car accidents through a close reading of Wole Soyinka’s 1965 postindependence play The Road. Shifting to screen media, she discusses Ousmane Sembene’s Xala and Jean-Pierre Bekolo’s Quartier Mozart and reviews popular, low-budget Nollywood films. Finally, Green-Simms considers how feminist texts rewrite and work in dialogue with the male-centered films and novels where the car stands in for patriarchal power and capitalist achievement.

Providing a unique perspective on technology in Africa—one refusing to be confined to narratives of either underdevelopment or inevitable progress—and covering a broad range of interdisciplinary material, Postcolonial Automobility will appeal not only to scholars and students of African literature and cinema but also to those in postcolonial and globalization studies.

Awards

Won the African Literature Association Award for Best First Book for 2019

Lindsey B. Green-Simms is assistant professor of literature at American University in Washington, D.C.

Clear, lucid, and engaging. Lindsey B. Green-Simms does an excellent job mediating close literary analysis, broader historical and cultural focus on the car in Africa, and astute theoretical readings.

Marian Aguiar, Carnegie Mellon University

With Postcolonial Automobility, Lindsey B. Green-Simms produces a veritable sociocultural biography of the automobile and illustrates this through various sources including literary texts, African art and popular movies, the variable opinions of car owners and their users, and the multiple urban legends that have grown up with and around vehicles in this part of Africa. It is a beautifully written gift offering to this most desired object of African modernity.

Ato Quayson, University of Toronto, author of Oxford Street, Accra: City Life and the Itineraries of Transnationalism

Contents
Introduction: Thinking Automobility, Feeling Automobility
1. The Hum of Progress: Motorcars and the Modernization of West Africa
2. “No Danger No Delay”: Wole Soyinka and the Perils of Driving
3. Moving Pictures, Mired Cars: The Automobile in African Francophone
4. The Return of the Mercedes: Upward Mobility, the Good Life, and Nigerian Video Film
5. Women in Traffic: Towards a Feminist Automobility
Conclusion: Global (Be)Longings
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Read the book's introduction.

 

Winner of the African Literature Association Award for Best First Book for 2019

 

Read a set of responses to Postcolonial Automobility; with contributions from Carli Coetzee, Moradewun Adejunmobi, Kenneth Harrow, Carmela Garritano and Ato Quayson; and a response by Lindsey Green-Simms, to her readers. If you are reading from a location somewhere on the African continent and your institution does not subscribe, please use this voucher to access the articles.