So Long a Letter

So Long a Letter (French: Une si longue lettre) is a semi-autobiographical epistolary novel originally written in French by the Senegalese writer Mariama Bâ.[1] Its theme is the condition of women in Western African society.

So Long a Letter
AuthorMariama Bâ
Original titleUne si longue lettre.
CountrySenegal
LanguageFrench
GenreNovel
Published1979 [Les Nouvelles Éditions Africaines du Sénégal]
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages90 pp (hardback edition)
ISBN978-2266-02-7 (hardback edition)
OCLC9668743

So Long a Letter, Mariama Bâ's first novel, is literally written as a long letter. As the novel begins, Ramatoulaye Fall is beginning a letter to her lifelong friend Aissatou Bâ. The occasion for writing is Ramatoulaye's recent widowhood. As she gives her friend the details of her husband's death, she recounts the major events in their lives.

The novel is often used in literature classes focusing on women's roles in post-colonial Africa. It won the first Noma Prize for Publishing in Africa in 1980.[1]

Plot summary

So long a letter, or in its original French publication, Une si longue lettre, is written as a series of letters, known as an epistolary novel[2], from the main character Ramatoulaye Fall to her best friend Aissatou following the sudden death from heart attack of Ramatoulaye's husband Moudou Ba. The letter is written while Ramatoulaye is going through 'Iddah, a four month and ten day mourning process that widow of the Muslim Senegalese culture must follow. Ramatoulaye begins her first letters by recalling and describing the emotions that flooded her during the first few days after her husband's death and speaks in detail about how he lost his life. She transitions the tone and time by discussing the life she had with her husband, from the beginning of their relationship to his betrayal of a thirty year marriage by secretly marrying his daughter's school best friend to the life he had with his second wife. Throughout this short and compelling novel, Ramatoulaye details to Assiatou, who experienced a similar but different marital situation, how she emotionally dealt with and changed by his betrayal, his death, and being a single mother of many.

Analysis

The letter covered many topics such as polygyny, Senegalese class hierarchy, and religion so, it was difficult to place the genre of the book. Some called it a novel while others referred to Bâ's work as a letter.[3]

Author and professor Uzoma Esonwanne interpreted the book as a challenge to colonialism while also acknowledging colonial practices.[4] The character Ramatoulaye's insistence on being heard and providing inside commentary on the downside of polygyny, made Esonwanne question the part gender plays in this new era of the world.

Author and Yale professor Christopher L. Miller found Ba's So Long a Letter more journal-like, in that it held her written letter(s) with no one answering back.[5]

Literary scholar Abiola Irele called it "the most deeply felt presentation of the female condition in African fiction".[6]

Reception

The letter was used in the western hemisphere to study how strong bonds women formed influenced them. [7] Ramatoulaye and Aissatou’s friendship helped them break away from social norms, gaining social and political respect without a male.

The letter was also used to understand women’s views on polygamy. Some women in Senegal saw fault in polygamy and fought against it. Aissatou leaves her husband for practicing polygamy and Ramatoulaye says no to marriage to another man.

The author was praised for her involvement in expanding African literature as well as feminism through personal accounts of her life.

Themes

So Long a Letter deals with multiple themes, which includes the life of women in Senegal during the 1970s and 1980s, family and community life, Islam and polygamy, and death rituals.[8]

The letters explore the tensions between Ramatoulaye's feminist values (developed largely as a consequence of her French colonial education) and her religion, which is often used a means of justifying the mistreatment of women like herself. However, Ramatoulaye attributes the mistreatment of women by men to the misinterpretation and misappropriation of Islamic scriptures, rather than suggesting that they are inherently sexist.

Characters

  • Ramatoulaye: The widowed Senegalese woman who, after 30 years of marriage and 12 children, narrates the story of her psychological abandonment by her husband, who marries a second wife. Ramatoulaye physically distances herself from Modou who dies four years after this second marriage. Ramatoulaye turns down two other marriage proposals, including that of Daouda Dieng. She is well educated and teaches at a university. After her husband's second marriage, she must work a lot, since her husband cuts off family ties and financial support.
  • Modou: The husband of Ramatoulaye and of Binetou. He was well educated, handsome, and charming. For his own selfish desires, he marries Binetou and cuts ties with his 12 children and first wife, Ramatoulaye. He later dies of a heart attack.
  • Mawdo: Ex-husband of Aïssatou. After being pressured by his mother Nabou, Mawdo follows tradition of polygamy and marries a young girl also named Nabou, who is his first cousin. After his marriage with Nabou, Aïssatou (his first wife) divorces him. He is Modou's long-time friend and a doctor.
  • Aïssatou: Ramatoulaye's best friend, to whom the letters are addressed. She divorced Mawdo because she did not believe in polygamy; she left him a letter explaining her actions and never returned. She takes care of herself well and bought Ramatoulaye a car, which made life much easier for Ramatoulaye. Her divorce is symbolic because it represents a new life for her. She later leaves Senegal with her four sons and moves to the United States to start over. She succeeds in making a new life for herself.
  • Aïssatou: Ramatoulaye and Modou's daughter, who is named after her best friend. She enters into a relationship with a boy named Ibrahim Sall, whom she calls "Iba," a poor student who impregnates her. They claim to love each other and plan their marriage after their studies. Since she is still a high school student, Iba's mother will take care of the child until she graduates.
  • Ibrahima Sall: A student of law who impregnates Aissatou, Ramatoulaye's daughter. He is tall, respectful, well-dressed, and punctual. Aïssatou is his first and possibly only love, he says. He will marry Aïssatou if Ramatoulaye will allow it.
  • Binetou: A young girl around Daba's age who marries her 'sugar daddy' (Modou) because her mother, who was poor, wanted to live the high life and climb the social ladder. Binetou became an outcast who never quite fit in with the younger couples or the mature adults.
  • Daouda Dieng: A suitor of Ramatoulaye prior to her marriage with Modou who Proposes to Ramatoulaye after her husband dies, but is turned down.
  • Daba: Ramatoulaye's and Modou's daughter. She is married and the eldest child. She is disgusted by her father's choice to take a second wife especially one of her closest friends.
  • Arame, Yacine, and Dieynaba: Known as "the trio." They are Ramatoulaye's daughters. They smoke, drink, party, and wear pants instead of ladylike dresses. They represent the next modernized generation after liberation from France.
  • Alioune and Malick: Ramatoulaye's young boys who play ball in the streets because they claim to have no space to play in a compound. They get hit by a motorcyclist that they drag home with the intention of having their mother avenge them. They are disappointed to find that Ramatoulaye does not get mad at the cyclist, but at the boys because they were careless to play in the streets. This shows Ramatoulaye's wisdom in raising her children in the right way.
  • Ousmane and Oumar: Young sons of Ramatoulaye. They represent the idea that a father figure would be beneficial for Ramatoulaye's children since several of them are still so young.
  • Farmata: The griot woman who is Ramatoulaye's neighbor and childhood friend. She noses into Ramatoulaye's business and is the one to point out Aissatou's pregnancy to Ramatoulaye. She represents a 'Spirit of Wisdom', but doesn't always give the best advice. Ramatoulaye and her become friends despite caste barriers.
  • Jacqueline Diack: Protestant wife of Samba Diack, a fellow doctor like Mawdo Bâ. Her husband's openly treacherous tendencies lead her to depression.
  • Little Nabou: Raised by Mawdo's mother, Grande Nabou. She is brought up under very traditional Muslim customs and becomes a midwife. She later marries Mawdo Bâ to be his second wife. She is the niece of Grande Nabou and the first cousin of Mawdo Bâ.
  • Grande Nabou: Mawdo Bâ's mother, who influences him to marry Little Nabou. She dislikes Aïssatou since she comes from a working-class family and her father is a jewelry maker. Grande Nabou is a princess from a royal family in Senegal and is very conservative in her views and traditions.
  • Mawdo Fall. He is the first son of Ranatoulaye and Modu. Gifted with intelligence, he is extremely brilliant. He always takes first position in class, after every test and exams, until his Philosophy teacher at the Blaise Diagne Secobdary School decides to racially discriminates him intellectually, because of a white boy, by the name of Jean Claude, by knocking off one or two marks from his grade for every single mistake he makes
gollark: Yes, this is mostly the sort of "take things as personal attacks" thing I don't like.
gollark: If you can't discuss things like that without interpreting it as toxic or a personal attack or something, 🐝 you somewhat.
gollark: I don't see how that is "necessarily toxic".
gollark: I suspect that it's because we discuss a wide range of stuff, which is an effect a hypothetical ControversialEsolangs would lack.
gollark: It hasn't, though.

References

  1. Rizwana Habib Latha, "Feminisms in an African Context: Mariama Bâ's so Long a Letter", Agenda 50, African Feminisms One (2001), 23.
  2. https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/culture-magazines/so-long-letter
  3. Androne, Mary Jane (2003). The Collective Spirit of Mariama Ba's So Long a Letter. Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, Inc. p. 37. ISBN 1-59221-028-7.
  4. Nnaemeka, Obioma (1997). The Politics of (M)Othering Womanhood, identity, and resistance in African literature. 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE: Routledge. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-415-13789-6.CS1 maint: location (link)
  5. Nnaemeka, Obioma (1997). The Politics of (M)Othering Womanhood, identity, and resistance in African literature. London: Routledge. pp. 84–85. ISBN 0-415-13789-6.
  6. Irele Abiola. "Parallels of African Conditions: A Comparative Study of Three PostColonial Novels", Journal of African and Comparative Literature 1 (1981): 69–91. Print.
  7. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1029&context=english_diss
  8. Ali, Souad T. (2012-01-01). "Feminism in Islam: A Critique of Polygamy in Mariama Ba's Epistolary Novel So Long A Letter". Hawwa. 10 (3): 179–199. doi:10.1163/15692086-12341236. ISSN 1569-2086.
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