A woman walks along an oil pipeline near Shell's Utorogu flow station in Warri
1 2019-03-04T20:46:06-08:00 Dawn Hicks 851fbe6ff47c68a2de1a4f5f7b6db729bc4d659a 10581 1 “Afren - the UK company leading the hunt for Africa's oil”, Rowena Mason, Telegraph plain 2019-03-04T20:46:06-08:00 PD*10751466 GEORGE OSODI London United Kingdom XGO108 AP PHOTOSPEED3NG A woman walks along an oil pipeline near Shell's Utorogu flow station in Warri, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2006. Nigerian troops battled militia fighters in swamps around a Royal Dutch Shell oil platform that militants attacked at dawn Sunday, the third assault on Shell oil facilities in less than a week in the troubled region. Shell confirmed the attack on the Benisede oil platform in the southern oil-rich Niger Delta and said some of its staff had been injured and taken to hospital. The company also said it had begun evacuating personnel from vulnerable facilities in the region because of worsening security. (AP Photo/George Osodi) 20100124 Status=Ready AP APTOPIX NIGERIA OIL UNREST Media Mogul Dawn Hicks 851fbe6ff47c68a2de1a4f5f7b6db729bc4d659aThis page is referenced by:
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2019-03-04T20:20:57-08:00
"Spider the Artist" in Nnedi Okorafor’s Kabu-Kabu
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Pipeline people: the good, the bad, the ugly, and a found poem.
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2019-05-02T00:08:13-07:00
I am not an English major, and so I never heard of the term found poem until, by accident, I created one by listing all my favorite quotes in “Spider the Artist” in the order I found them.
The quotes, from the story’s female narrator, Eme, appealed to me because they were honest declarations with no excuses or blame shifting.
Favorite Statements
“My village was shit” (101)
“But I married a stupid man” (102)
"We are pipeline people" (102)
“Nigeria supplies 25% of U.S. oil and we get nothing in return.
Nothing but death by zombie attack” (105-106)
“I was stuck” (107)
“I needed courage” (107)
“My life is shit” (108)
“I began to hope” (109)
“They were thinking creatures” (113)
“Whoooooooosh” (114)
“So I lived” (115)
The statement that strikes me the most is “We are pipeline people”. What does it mean to be pipeline people? According to a Google search of Nigeria pipeline people, the results show a list of headlines announcing the numbers of people found dead after a pipeline explosion. The images show similar stories of explosions and people’s lives disrupted. The information offers little about how people are living along the pipelines. From this information, people are miraculously alive despite having to cohabitate with pipes carrying flammable fuel.
Interestingly, in “Spider the Artist” the pipeline explosion saves Eme’s life.
“My life is shit”
Eme was a fourth-generation woman living with the pipeline running through her village. Her great grandmother used to lay on the pipe and listen to the fuel, which she called “magical fluids”, sloshing down the pipes (102-103). What was once new and mysterious became a deadly borderland between human survival and the Anansi spider droids, kill on contact protectors of the pipeline. The narrator’s village was made shit by the introduction of the pipelines, her husband was forced into stupid activities, like bunkering, to survive. Her life was stuck and shit because the fuel poisoned her village’s water, that “shriveled women’s wombs,” leaving her childless (101).
“They are thinking creatures”- The “they” are the Anansi Droid 419 spiders.
- “Made to combat pipeline bunkering and terrorism” (104)
- Has wire for silk, three feet tall, liquid blue eyes.
- The pipeline is its web to repair and defend.
- Senses pipe intruder from vibrations.
- Has artificial intelligence.
Udide Okwanka was the name Eme gave to her secret musical spider droid companion. They met each evening in the three-foot easement, the kill zone, between the pipe and her yard. There they communicated with music. Her guitar “wanted to tell you its story because only it could” (102). Udide’s music was like “communing with god” (111). The exchange was courage and hope.
“Whooooooosh”
Udide set the spark so the bunkered fuel and its takers would die, but shielded Eme so she could finally start her life. “So I lived”. - 1 2019-03-07T14:01:41-08:00 Blogs about Petrofiction 6 plain 2019-04-30T23:27:41-07:00 Petrofiction--a unit that examines petroculture (gas and oil culture) in relation to speculative fiction narratives concerning oil companies' economic imperialism and environmental destruction. Other texts reflect the scarcity of fuel in developing countries and the ways that scarcity influences their transportation, their economies and their ecology. Because petrofiction is a particular focus because of an article that a student and I are writing, many of these blogs focus on the relationship between the West's gas and oil culture and the ways that Western companies' economic dominance are played out in African nations and the Caribbean.