Niger Delta Black Gold Blues: Can Writers Bring About Environmental Justice Where Slow Violence Has Proven So Devastating? or A Cautionary Tale for Environmental Sacrifice Zones Worldwide

Niger River Delta Black Gold Blues

This share of Paradise, the delta of my birth, 
reels from an immeasurable wound. 
Barrels of alchemical draughts flow 
from this hurt to the unquestioning world 
that lights up its life in a blind trust. 
The inheritance I sat on for centuries 
now crushes my body and soul. 

--Tanure Ojaide, "Delta Blues"

About this Project by Jonathan Steinwand


Do we know where the oil we consume comes from? and under what conditions it is extracted? What if the price we pay at the pump does not cover the true costs of the violence and social and environmental injustice involved in oil extraction? Why do we look away from these issues? Can writers help us see the world more clearly so we can become more responsibly engaged?

The Niger River Delta in Nigeria provides a compelling case for looking at how people and the environment can be overrun by the scramble for the extraction of precious resources (oil, the "black gold" in this case). Furthermore, taking the lead of Ken Saro-Wiwa, creative writers have in their writing cried out to the world about the environmental injustice they face in a region where corporations, neocolonial bureacrats, militants, and opportunists conspire to degrade the environment, disgrace the poor, and deface micro-minority identity. 

Join Concordia College (Moorhead, Minnesota) students in English 230: Introduction to Literary Scholarship (2016) as they look into the questions and issues surrounding this environmental sacrifice zone. See who we the contributors are on the Contributors page.


 

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