Emecheta's themes of
child slavery, motherhood, female independence and freedom through education gained recognition from critics and honours. She once described her stories as "stories of the world, where women face the universal problems of poverty and oppression, and the longer they stay, no matter where they have come from originally, the more the problems become identical." Her works explore the tension between tradition and modernity.[2] She has been characterized as "the first successful black woman novelist living in Britain after 1948".[3]
Early life and education
Buchi Emecheta was born on 21 July 1944, in
Lagos, Nigeria, to
Igbo parents,[4][5] Alice (Okwuekwuhe) Emecheta and Jeremy Nwabudinke.[6][7] Her parents were from Umuezeokolo Odeanta village in
Ibusa,
Delta State. Her father was a railway worker and moulder.[6] Her 1977 novel The Slave Girl is inspired by her mother, Alice Ogbanje Ojebeta Emecheta,[8] a former slave girl, was sold into slavery by her brother to a relative to buy silk head ties for his coming-of-age dance. When her mistress died, Ogbanje Emecheta returned home to freedom.
Due to the gender bias of the time, the young Emecheta was initially kept at home while her younger brother was sent to school; but after persuading her parents to consider the benefits of her education, she spent her early childhood at an all-girls' missionary school. When she was nine years old, her father died "of complications brought on by a wound contracted in the swamps of
Burma, where he had been conscripted to fight for
Lord Louis Mountbatten and the remnants of the
British Empire".[9][10] A year later, Emecheta received a full scholarship to
Methodist Girls' School in
Yaba, Lagos, where she remained until the age of 16. During this time, her mother died, leaving Emecheta an orphan. In 1960, she married Sylvester Onwordi,[5][7] a schoolboy to whom she had been engaged since she was 11 years old.[11][12] Later that year, she gave birth to a daughter, and in 1961 their younger son was born.[1]
Onwordi immediately moved to
London to attend a university, and Emecheta joined him there with their first two children in 1962.[1] She gave birth to five children in six years, three daughters and two sons[12] Her marriage was unhappy and sometimes violent, as chronicled in her autobiographical writings such as 1974's Second-Class Citizen.[1][13] To keep her sanity, Emecheta wrote in her spare time. However, her husband was deeply suspicious of her writing, and he ultimately burned her first manuscript,[14] as revealed in The Bride Price, which was eventually published in 1976. It had been her first book, but she had to rewrite it after the earlier version had been destroyed. As she later said, "There were five years between the two versions."[15]
At the age of 22, pregnant with her fifth child, Emecheta left her husband.[16][17] While working to support her children alone, she earned a B.Sc. (Hons) degree in Sociology in 1972 from the
University of London.[5][6][16] In her 1984 autobiography, Head above Water, she wrote: "As for my survival for the past twenty years in England, from when I was a little over twenty, dragging four cold and dripping babies with me and pregnant with a fifth one—that is a miracle."[18] She went on to gain her PhD from the university in 1991.[19]
Career
Emecheta began writing about her experiences of
Black British life in a regular column in the New Statesman,[1] and a collection of these pieces became her first published book in 1972, In the Ditch.[5][16] The semi-autobiographical novel[4] chronicled the struggles of a main character named Adah, who is forced to live in a housing estate while working as a librarian to support her five children.[5] Her second novel published two years later, Second-Class Citizen (
Allison and Busby, 1974),[20] also drew on Emecheta's own experiences, and both books were eventually published in one volume by Allison and Busby under the title Adah's Story (1983).[21] These three stories introduced Emecheta's three major themes, which were the quest for equal treatment, self-confidence and dignity as a woman. Her works Gwendolen (1989, also published as The Family), Kehinde (1994) and The New Tribe (2000) differ in some way, as they address the issues of immigrant life in Great Britain.[2] Most of her fictional works are focused on
sexual discrimination and racial prejudice, informed by her own experiences as both a single parent and a black woman living in the United Kingdom.[22]
From 1965 to 1969, Emecheta worked as a library officer for the
British Museum in London.[6] From 1969 to 1976, she was a youth worker and sociologist for the
Inner London Education Authority,[6][23] and from 1976 to 1978 she worked as a community worker in
Camden, North London,[4][6] meanwhile continuing to produce further novels at Allison and Busby, with Margaret Busby as her editor[1] – The Bride Price (1976), The Slave Girl (1977), The Joys of Motherhood (1979) and Destination Biafra (1982) – as well as the children's books Titch the Cat (1979, based on a story by her 11-year-old daughter Alice)[24] and Nowhere To Play (1980).[25]
Buchi Emecheta suffered a
stroke in 2010,[16] and her last years were marked by increasing disability and illness.[9] She died in London on 25 January 2017, aged 72.[16][20][30]
In September 2004, she appeared in the "A Great Day in London" photograph taken at the
British Library, featuring 50 Black and Asian writers who have made major contributions to contemporary British literature.[34][35] In 2005, she was made an
OBE for services to literature.[16]
Emecheta features at number 98 on a list of 100 women recognised in August 2018 by BBC History Magazine as having changed the world.[44][45]
In March 2019,
Camden Town Brewery launched a football kit using artwork featuring "some of the most inspiring female icons to have influenced the brewery's home borough of Camden".[46]
In October 2019, a new exhibition space in the library for students at
Goldsmiths, University of London, was dedicated to Buchi Emecheta, marked by a reception with short talks by Goldsmiths warden
Frances Corner and the Head of Library Services, Leo Appleton, preceding an address by Margaret Busby.[53][54][55]
In October 2021, Emecheta's second novel, Second Class Citizen, was reissued as a
Penguin Modern Classic,[56][57] as was In the Ditch in 2023.[58]
Voices of the Crossing - The impact of Britain on writers from Asia, the Caribbean and Africa.
Ferdinand Dennis,
Naseem Khan (eds), London: Serpent's Tail, 1998. Buchi Emecheta: p. 93 "Crossing Boundaries."
"Feminism with a small 'f'!" in Kirsten Holst Petersen (ed.), Criticism and Ideology: Second African Writers' Conference, Stockholm 1988, Uppsala: Scandinanvian Institute of African Studies, 1988, pp. 173–181.
^Dawson, Ashley, "Beyond Imperial Feminism: Buchi Emecheta's London Novels and Black British Women's Emancipation", in Mongrel Nation: Diasporic Culture and the Making of Postcolonial Britain, University of Michigan Press, 2007, p. 117.
^Jussawalla, Feroza F., Reed Way Dasenbrock,
"Buchi Emecheta", Interviews with Writers of the Post-colonial World, University Press of Mississippi, 1992, p. 84.