Going Beyond the Single Story

In our last class, we did some close textual reading on Dany Laferriere’s The World is Moving Around Me, a story of one journalist’s perspective about the Haitian earthquake in 2010.

In one passage we read, I noticed the tone of surprise conveyed through the diction of discovery that Laferriere uses, with regards to the Haitian people. He says that we “discovered a proud, yet modest people”, amidst the rubble and clouds of dust. He mentions their resilience and their ability to “stand up to misfortune” (27). By using the word “discovered”, which means to find something unexpectedly, the text ends up conveying a tone of surprise at having found out the kind of resilience the Haitians show. We, the readers get a sense that their reaction to the calamity was something that surprised him and many other people who were watching from around the world. Why is that?

As someone who was born and lived in the Philippines for 18 years, this kind of resilience is something I’ve seen in my own country, especially last year, when Typhoon Haiyan devastated the many lives of the Filipinos. Through it all, the Filipinos were still resilient. They had attitudes that could not be blown away by the storm, and I was, and am still amazed by their ability to cope with something that catastrophic. It got me asking myself: What kind of narratives do I have in mind that have led me to be so surprised to “discover” that they are indeed a strong people?

Is it the way media shows these places as weak, third world countries that need our help? Have these narratives been so ingrained in us that we can’t see these people as anything else than that single story of weakness and charity we have been told?

In this TED talk, Chimamanda Adichie talks about the danger of a single story through a story about their houseboy named Fide, who was described by her mother only as “poor”. She grew up characterizing him only in that category. So much so, that when they visited Fide’s home and saw the beautiful basket his brother had made, she was shocked: “It had not occurred to me that anybody in their family could make anything. All that I knew was that they were poor. It had become impossible for me to see them as anything but poor. Their poverty became my single story of them.”

Though my aim here is not to boil this feat of resilience down to something so simplistic, I think that a reason why we don’t expect too much from both these countries: Haiti and Philippines is because of the story of them as third world countries that we are familiar with. It is why when we witness their strength and resilience as a strong nation, a strong people, we are amazed, stunned and just in wonder at having “discovered” that they are more that what we were led to believe.

As readers and as global citizens, we have the responsibility to test the narratives that we are being fed, there is an exigence to go out and educate ourselves so that our behaviour can better reflect that depth of knowledge and the respect that different cultures, religions, genders warrant.

What kind of narratives have you grown up with and how can you challenge those? What will happen when we do?

1 thought on “Going Beyond the Single Story

  1. vivianwan

    Thanks for the wonderful post, Charice! I remember coming across this video after having read Chimamanda Adichie’s collection of short stories, The Thing Around Your Neck. I think what frightens me a bit is the ease with which we can fall prey to thinking about people in a uni-dimensional way. However, I think popular media has been particular outspoken in recent years in its attempts to make multiple perspectives known but is there a certain point in which people refuse to see the complexity because its easier to read one perspective (despite the wealth of information available) and take it as fact?

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