By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi Prince Charles’ invitation to storied Nigerian monarchs to visit him in Abuja du...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Prince Charles’ symbolic violence against our monarchs and our monarch’s blithe incapacity to appreciate, much less resist, it didn’t surprise me at all. It is the product of the deliberate and systematic inferiorization of the traditional institutions in Britain’s former colonies, of which Nigeria was only one, by British colonizers.
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
Prince Charles’ invitation to storied Nigerian monarchs to
visit him in Abuja during his Nigerian visit is a classic instantiation of what
French theorist Pierre Bourdieu has called symbolic violence. Charles is only a prince, but he artfully
deployed his symbolic capital as heir apparent to the British throne to derogate
Nigerian monarchs who are his mother’s notional equivalents.
Many Nigerians on social media were understandably outraged
not only by the superciliousness of the gesture but also by the embarrassing,
self-denigrating obsequiousness of the Nigerian monarchs who honored Prince
Charles’ invitation in Abuja. A Sam Hart with the Twitter handle @hartng
expressed righteous rage at the colonialist condescension that Prince Charles’ invitation
to Nigeria’s monarchs to visit him symbolizes. “We are no longer a British
Colony so we are not beholden to the Crown,” he wrote. “Why would our 1st Class
Traditional Rulers be herded to Abuja for sighting by the Next in Line?”
One Jide Taiwo (@thejidetaiwo) also captured the cultural
anxieties of many Nigerians when he wrote: “So traditional rulers in Nigeria,
including some of the most respected thrones ie Ooni of Ife & the Emir of
Kano, left their kingdoms to go greet the visiting Prince Charles – the 70 year
old arole who is still waiting … [to] become
king? Wonderful.”
Nevertheless, although it’s true that Prince Charles is
inferior in positional terms to the Nigerian monarchs he has belittled, that’s
not really true in the global cultural economy. In his book Language and Symbolic Power, Bourdieu points out that in our
everyday relational and discursive encounters, we habitually bring certain unspoken
but nonetheless crucially important dispositions to bear, which he calls “habitus.” This
habitus predisposes us to unconsciously confer authority and prestige on some
people and deny same to others. It also structures our perception of social and
cultural reality.
Prince Charles knows this. He knows that because of
Britain’s role as Nigeria’s former colonizer, current neo-colonizer, and stealthy
annihilator of the self-esteem of its people, the cultural and social unconscious
of Nigerian monarchs will incline them to regard him as their superior. In
Bourdieuan terms, Prince Charles has a more valuable symbolic capital than
Nigeria’s so-called first-class monarchs do.
Symbolic violence is said to occur when people who wield
enormous symbolic capital use the privilege and affordances of this capital to inferiorize
people who are—or who they perceive to be— subordinate to them. Although he is
only a potential king, Prince Charles obviously disdains our monarchs’
self-construal of themselves as kings and as heirs to an illustrious, if
bygone, regality. That was why he didn’t visit them in their palaces, but instead
invited them to visit him in Abuja.
And because our monarchs have interiorized their own
inferiority, it didn’t hurt their royal self-worth, nor did it strike them as anomalous,
that a visiting prince from another country didn’t find them worthy of
personalized visits but instead invited them to visit him outside their domains
of traditional authority.
When Prince Charles visited Ghana, he paid a visit to the palace of the King of Ashanti |
Prince Charles’ symbolic violence against our monarchs and our monarch’s blithe incapacity to appreciate, much less resist, it didn’t surprise me at all. It is the product of the deliberate and systematic inferiorization of the traditional institutions in Britain’s former colonies, of which Nigeria was only one, by British colonizers.
For instance, in the 1800s, the Colonial Office in London
officially said no traditional ruler in the colonies should be referred to as a
“king.” As I pointed in previous columns, on page 110 of an 1821 British
Foreign Office document titled Correspondence
with Foreign Courts Regarding Execution of Treaties Contracted, the British
colonial government emphatically instructed that monarchs in British colonies
should never be called “kings.” A king is a sovereign ruler, and only the
British monarch was qualified to be called a king in the British Empire “on
which the sun never sets.” Monarchs in the colonies could only be called “chiefs.”
If the “chiefs” enjoyed enduring historic prestige among their people, they
might be called “paramount chiefs,” but never “kings.”
Nigerians have internalized this invidious nomenclatural
discrimination and still call their monarchs “chiefs.” This is especially true
in northern Nigeria where non-Muslim—or non-Emirate— traditional rulers are
called “chiefs” and their spheres of traditional influence called “chiefdoms.”
In southern Nigeria, “chief” has now been appropriated to approximate what the
British call a knighthood, that is, a traditional title conferred by a monarch
ideally in recognition of an individual’s outstanding achievements or
contributions to society.
Another enduring legacy of colonial Britain’s
inferiorization of our traditional institutions is encapsulated in the “His
Royal Highness” form of address that our monarchs still cherish. As I have
pointed out in many previous columns, “Royal Highness” is prefixed only to the
names of princes and princesses in Britain. Monarchs and their consorts are
addressed as “Royal Majesty.” It is entirely conceivable that since the British
Colonial office in London did not accept traditional rulers in the colonies as
“kings,” it taught that they be addressed as “Royal Highnesses,” which implied
that kings in the colonies were at best equivalent to British princes.
Nearly six decades after formal political independence from
Britain, Nigerian traditional institutions are still stuck in, and defined by,
the odious colonial categories imposed on them by British colonizers. Let me
give just one recent example to illustrate this. Sometime in late July this
year, I was invited to present a paper at the annual convention of the Zumunta
Association USA, an association of northern Nigerians in the United States,
where a representative of the Emir of Kano delivered the keynote address. The emir’s representative repeatedly addressed
the emir of Kano as “His Highness.” So did other speakers.
However, when I had cause to make reference to the emir, I
chose to honor him with the title of “His Royal Majesty” and explained that
“His Highness” is used in Britain to refer to princes and princesses, which the
emir isn’t. The emir’s representative wasn’t persuaded. He said the emir told
him he preferred to be addressed as “His Highness.”
That, for me, was a powerful sociolinguistic manifestation
of the internalization of inferiority. Honoring Prince Charles’ invitation
to Abuja was only the cultural and political expression of this inferiority. Since
Prince Charles is formally addressed as “His Royal Highness,” as most of our
monarchs are, they have titular parity. When you add Prince Charles’ symbolic
and cultural capital to the mix, it’s easy to see why our monarchs were effortlessly
intimidated into authorizing their own humiliation.
To be clear, I am not a monarchist. In fact, I have nothing
but ice-cold disdain for the tyranny of inherited, often unearned, authority,
which monarchy represents. Nevertheless, my personal philosophical revulsion
against monarchy is immaterial to the reality that Nigeria’s prominent monarchs
were the willing victims of Prince Charles’ symbolic violence.
This is important because it strikes at the core of what I
like to call our national xenophilia, that is, our predilection for irrational,
unjustified, inferiority-driven veneration of the foreign and the corresponding
sense of low national self-worth that this veneration activates.
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