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20/08/2025
Chimamanda has returned to fiction after 12 years. But is the author stuck in the 2010s?
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Nesrine Malik |
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First, apologies if you receiving this email a second time – due to an error, you may been sent an incorrect version of this week’s Long Wave.
It’s summer reading time, and I have finally dived into Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Dream Count, her highly anticipated return to fiction after a 12-year hiatus. This week, I give a review of sorts – what was most striking about the work is how it feels of a certain time, and how Adichie is an icon who sits between two eras. We’ll get into it after the roundup.
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Weekly roundup |
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 Boy banned … Sauti Sol on stage. Kenya is one of 31 countries in Africa that criminalises queer people. Photograph: Bram Lammers |
Africans join calls to scrap the map | The African Union has backed the Correct the Map campaign to end the use of the 16th-century Mercator map of the world in favour of one that more accurately represents Africa’s size.
Row over facial recognition at Notting Hill | A letter to the Metropolitan police from 11 civil liberty and anti-racism groups has called on the commissioner to scrap plans to deploy live facial recognition at Notting Hill carnival this month because the technology is riven with “racial bias” and subject to a legal challenge.
Racism mars Premier League opener | The Ghanaian footballer and Bournemouth forward Antoine Semenyo has thanked his teammates and Liverpool FC for their support after he reported racist abuse during the Premier League’s season opener at Anfield last week.
Caribbean seeks cricket revival | This month St Vincent and the Grenadines hosted the first Emancipation Cricket festival to celebrate the “birth of Caribbean cricket”. This move comes amid concerns from Caricom about the state of the sport, including youth uptake and the performance of national teams.
Outed Kenyan singer inspires hope | Willis Chimano, a member of the popular Kenyan Afropop band Sauti Sol, was outed as gay in 2018, leading to a torrent of abuse and threats. But the experience has made Chimano determined to push for change in a country where homosexuality is still illegal.
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In depth: Feminist icon to pop culture artefact? |
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 Living the dream … Adichie with her latest literary offering. Photograph: X/Chimamanda_Adichie |
Dream Count is as much a book as it is a publishing event. In the years between her previous novel, Americanah – a book so successful that it has made the New York Times’s list of the best fiction of the 21st century – and her latest offering, Adichie became a cultural figurehead. Dream Count returns to the themes that Adichie is in greatest command of: an existence that sits between living in Africa and living in the diaspora. The Covid pandemic acts as a backdrop to the lives of four female protagonists, and between them there are the roiling affairs of the heart, disappointments and assaults and bodily wreckage whose collective toll starts to be felt, or “counted”, in middle age.
The central figure is modelled on Nafissatou Diallo, who was allegedly assaulted in 2011 in a hotel room by the French economist Dominique Strauss-Kahn. It is a “gesture of returned dignity”, Adichie says in her author’s note. But it is also an example of how the author always leans into the sharp and jagged realities of womanhood, with no desire to smooth its edges. Adichie is, above all, a a matter-of-fact narrator of bodily ravages: bad sex, small penises, postpartum injuries, fibroids and heavy bleeding. This is my favourite quality of Adichie’s. She doesn’t traffic in banalities or idealisation of Black women as poetically and magically tragic or noble. They just are.
In Dream Count, Adichie’s style is as confident and singular as ever. Almost too much so. Her strong voice inserts itself into the mouths of her protagonists, who sometimes pronounce things that only she writes, rather than what regular people say: “Each day with Chuka,” one character narrates, “I encountered his otherness.” Ultimately, the reader always feels in safe hands. This novel is about intersecting female relationships in a female universe of voices and points of view, and there is something cosy and mutually affirming in that.
Yet it also feels artificial (which is the writer’s prerogative, after all, to construct their narrative world), as if these characters were performing some grand allegory of a woman’s arc. I found myself thinking: just let them speak! Just let me embrace these women you have so tenderly portrayed. Which brings me to my main sense of the book: it felt like a series of set pieces, rather than a coherent work of fiction; an extended commentary on gender relations and societal expectations of women. I didn’t feel carried along, more an audience to strong but disconnected accounts and introspections.
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 Model citizen … a Dior T-shirt with a slogan taken from the title of Adichie’s book We Should All Be Feminists. Photograph: Dior |
There is something in this that may be related to the moment that transformed Adichie from a literary sensation to a pop culture behemoth. Her book-length essay We Should All Be Feminists, a landmark treatise on, well, why we should all be feminists, became a totem of a particular era of mid-00s trends. It was the time of Lean In and Girl Bosses and a broader fourth-wave feminism that revived the movement through online activism, #MeToo, and women’s marches.
Audio excerpts from Adichie’s Ted Talk on feminism were picked up by Beyoncé and featured in her 2013 hit Flawless. Dior designed T-shirts with “We should all be feminists” printed on them. It was a weird time. Adichie was a perfect icon for that moment: strident, smart but also glamorous – marrying liberal progressive politics on gender with accessibility. She became the face of the beauty brand No 7, was on Vanity Fair’s best-dressed list, and embraced fashion and beauty as a rebuke to those who see them as somehow diminishing women’s intellect.
Adichie distanced herself from Beyoncé’s version of feminism in particular, “as it is the kind that … gives quite a lot of space to the necessity of men”, she said. But there is an echo of that time and its ensuing discourses in Dream Count, even as she tries to transcend it. Men are not the protagonists but are still somehow centred, even if we roll to a conclusion that perhaps they are not necessary. And there are on-the-nose statements where Adichie ventriloquises through characters that tone of clapback feminism. “Dear men,” writes one of her characters in her blog where she dispenses satirical advice to men, “I understand that you don’t like abortion, but the best way to reduce abortion is if you take responsibility for where your male bodily fluids go.” There are also jarringly cartoonish portrayals of American, or Americanised, characters opining, which I interpreted as a jab at the smugness of “woke” progressives, a cohort I suppose Adichie would like to distance herself from.
The overarching feeling was of a book that was smaller than its writer. Adichie, as a talent, remains sharp and masterly, but as a social and political commentator, she sounds stranded. Perhaps one of the dangers of being an icon is the risk of one day becoming an artefact.
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What we’re into |
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 Black Star rising … Amaarae’s new album is an eclectic affair. Photograph: Salomé Gomis-Trezise |
Everybody’s talking about Amaarae’s new album, Black Star, which dropped this month (I first heard tracks from it while watching her perform at Maiden Voyage festival in London). With it, the Ghanaian American alté artist expands her sound into pop and dancehall, while drawing inspiration from her heritage with notes of highlife and baile funk. Girlie-Pop! is on repeat for me. Jason Okundaye |
I learned a lot from this fascinating deep dive into recent portrayals of the Black American elite, both in historical dramas such as The Gilded Age and in fashion. It neatly shows how complex issues of class and colourism uncomfortably sit alongside appetite to show Black lives not defined by suffering or racism. Nesrine |
The Jubilee series Middle Ground, which uses a one v 20 format, has a new viral episode featuring Insecure’s Amanda Seales, who is presented as a Black radical taking on 20 Black conservatives. It flooded my social media timelines at the weekend, and while the quality of debate varies, it is an intriguing watch. Jason |
This feature on the growth of African culture in the Caribbean is so Long Wave coded that it instantly called to mind previous editions of the newsletter on the synergy and flourishing economic ties between the two regions. These ties are growing into one of the most dynamic relationships in the diaspora. Nesrine |
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Black catalogue |
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 Weekend wardrobe … a photograph taken in 1986 from How Black Women Dress on a Saturday Night. Photograph: Deborah Carnegie |
The London-based archivist Deborah Carnegie’s collection How Black Women Dress on a Saturday Night spans from the 1950s to the present day and looks at the sartorial and beauty choices of Black British women. The collection, which was presented this summer at London College of Fashion’s Fashioning Frequencies exhibition, is an intimate archive drawn from family photo albums, submissions from friends and nightclub photographers’ collections. As Emma Loffhagen writes: “Carnegie’s work is a paean to a community whose influence on the country’s fashion she feels has gone under-acknowledged.” |
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