Bakandamiya An elegy

Saddiq Dzukogi

Book - 2025

"In this book-length epic poem set in Northern Nigeria, Saddiq Dzukogi blends the personal with the mythical, part prayer and part praise song, expanding the griot tradition of Bakandamiya, a poetic form from Northern Nigeria popularized by Mamman Shata." -

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Subjects
Published
Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 2025
Language
English
Main Author
Saddiq Dzukogi (Author)
Physical Description
Seiten
ISBN
9781496244277
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The masterful second collection from Dzukogi (Your Crib, My Qibla) draws on the mythic and poetic traditions of northern Nigeria for a lyrical reimagining of the legend of Bayajidda, a prince whose exile from Baghdad leads to his founding of the Hausa States in what is today Nigeria's predominantly Islamic north. In Dzukogi's version, a local spirit "born of death,/ forged by the power of grief" possesses the foreign prince to bring back fertility to the desert: "You are son of conquerors,/ but I have conquered your body/ for this simple purpose." This reframing of a foundational myth of Hausa tradition sets the stage for later poems that reflect on the Nigerian Civil War and legacies of nationhood: "Signs abound--a gory war is coming./ The spirits have fled the light of the new religion,/ and the badges of the old transpire like seismic murmurs/ in the fringes." In the more personal and confessional final section, the speaker feels their connection to the past as a mournful impossibility: "I must tell the secrets/ burning in my gullet/ to my ancestors with eyes clogged with the tongue/ of silence." Dzukogi makes potent and capacious use of myth to distill past and present. (Dec.)

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