Onitsha Market Literature
The Onitsha collection at KU consists of               an array of popular literature collected in 1966 by Thomas R. Buckman,               former KU Director of Libraries.             Buckman described the works as representing “a unique form             of popular literature in Africa” that reflected “the             serious concerns and social tensions of many of the people” in             newly-independent Nigeria.3 Many             pamphlets were handbooks offering advice in the face of adversity—grave             or light (Trust No-Body             in Time Because Human Being Is Trickish and Difficult). Much             of the literature focuses on love relationships and illustrates a             moral             as the drama ends in disaster (About the Husband and Wife Who             Hate Themselves). Some of the booklets detail trials and tribulations             that a protagonist must overcome to achieve success in the fast-paced             urban environment of West Africa (No Condition is Permanent).             Buckman noted that the popularity of the works, often for sale at             about $.35             a copy, was evidence of “the great thirst for general           reading matter among the growing literate population.”4

Onitsha Market Literature

The Onitsha collection at KU consists of an array of popular literature collected in 1966 by Thomas R. Buckman, former KU Director of Libraries. Buckman described the works as representing “a unique form of popular literature in Africa” that reflected “the serious concerns and social tensions of many of the people” in newly-independent Nigeria.3 Many pamphlets were handbooks offering advice in the face of adversity—grave or light (Trust No-Body in Time Because Human Being Is Trickish and Difficult). Much of the literature focuses on love relationships and illustrates a moral as the drama ends in disaster (About the Husband and Wife Who Hate Themselves). Some of the booklets detail trials and tribulations that a protagonist must overcome to achieve success in the fast-paced urban environment of West Africa (No Condition is Permanent). Buckman noted that the popularity of the works, often for sale at about $.35 a copy, was evidence of “the great thirst for general reading matter among the growing literate population.”4

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