Books from Previous Years
![]() A Few Words About Kingsborough's Common Reading for 2015 - 16: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
These aspects come together as a strong commendation of the book. A teaching text works best when it is interesting, when it is understandable, when it addresses important topical concerns, and when students can identify personally with character, story, theme. That all of this is true of Americanah may explain why it won the committee vote in an unprecedented landslide for the first time in my experience, nearly every voting member including students, alumni, staff and faculty chose this book, a ringing endorsement that likewise clarifies why it has garnered much in the way of literary "cred." Among other accolades, it was a New York Times's Ten Best Books of 2014; winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award; an NPR "Great Reads" Book, a Chicago Tribune, Washington Post and Seattle Times Best Book, and a Newsday Top 10 Book. For KCC Reads, then, this year's focus is immigration, immigrant life and the residency, legal, social and other structural concerns facing this population. This means our work for the coming academic naturally "plugs in" to other campus initiatives, such as Diversity Week, Immigration Day, Prof. Skoric's Immigrant Women's Group, her Immigration HUB, as well as to concerns of our Equity initiative and other priority projects. The premise of the novel is the relationship of its two protagonists, both born in Nigeria and who, after first falling in love and then graduating high school, become immigrants Ifemelu to America, Obinze to England. Emily Raboteau's Washington Post review characterizes it as a "book about the immigrant's quest: self-invention, which is the American subject. Americanah is unique among the booming canon of immigrant literature of the last generation." As the characters lives traject along very different paths, not only do Ifemelu and Obinze become estranged they also "lose" and must reconstruct their individual identities, their confidence and focus, and their "places" in the world. Their story prompts us to ask: What are the characters in search of? And, why do they decide, separately, to return home after working so hard to belong and thrive in new geographies?
~~~~ Teaching Resources on the book: Student Journal ~~~~ Videos of this Year's Events: View Chaumtoli Huq's Keynote Lecture on Americanah here: http://kbvideo.kingsborough.edu/embed/266/
View Prof. Skoric's Inaugural Lecture on Americanah here: http://kbvideo.kingsborough.edu/embed/261/ View Prof. Arenas' Fall Lecture on Americanah here:
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