Tuesday 7 April 2015

College?!?!

For those of you who may not know. I was accepted to be part of Bryn Mawr College's Class of 2019!!!!! I am beyond excited.


The only downside is that I have so much to do to get ready. I have medical forms to fill out and get my visa. I only got my new passport on Tuesday

To help me and some future poor soul, here are some ways to prepare for college in the fall

Pinterest

Pinterest is a godsend. I have boards for my dorm room, for study tips and for general college life. Pinterest is currently my survival guide.

Follow Anushka's board Dorm on Pinterest.
Follow Anushka's board College on Pinterest.
HerCampus

HerCampus.com is a great resource for all incoming freshmen. They have amazing giveaways and advice for you during and even after your college life. They also have an amazing book coming out.

HerCampus has given me ideas for dorm decoration, socialising on campus and how to use my degree to get a job in the future.*

Any tourism site about the area you're going to
For me that's VisitPhilly.com. It's  a pretty cool website that even has a breakdown month by month of any events happening in the city. 


I'm looking forward to going around and exploring the city!

Packing Lists
This is of uber-importance. Don't tell yourself that you're going to remember everything you need. That's a sure way to end up on the phone to your mom trying to describe to her the thing you need so she can send it to you before next week, when you have to have it by.

I'm making two lists. I'm planning on mailing the bulky stuff to myself and then packing light for the plain ride. Remember pack only essentials, most of the stuff you'll be able to buy once you get to college.

That's it form me for now, good luck Class of 2019!

* I might even start a HerCampus chapter at BMC, shhh....

Saturday 4 April 2015

REVIEW: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

(Source: https://postcardsfrompurgatory.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/americanah-cover-image.jpg)


Please excuse any gushing. Chimamanda Adichie is the queen of my heart.

Americanah tells the story of two Nigerians, Ifemelu and Obinze. They meet in high school, fall in loved and stay together in university. Nigeria is under military rule at this time, to escape the constant strikes at their university Ifemelu leaves to study in America. Obinze promises to follow soon. Instead, they are seperated for 13 years. When they reunite, Ifemelu has returned to Nigeria after running a successful race blog in America, while Obinze is married and had a child.

Americanah is a love story. Through all of Ifemelu and Obinze's faults, their trials and sucesses, part of you waits for the moment they reunite. Even stronger than Ifemeulu and Obinze's personal love story, is a love story for Nigeria. Ifemelu carries two things with her as she live in America, Obinze and Nigeria. Through all her blog entries, included when relevant in some of her chapters, is a sense she is writing her way home. While she becomes a savvy "Americanah"*, her blog makes sense of a world that was incomprehensible to her when she newly arrived. When she returns to Nigeria, part of her doesn't understand why, only that she must go back. Once she does, she is lost in the beginning. She soon starts another blog, writing her way back to Nigeria she knows.

All of Obinze's loves fail. Only his love for Ifemelu is strong enough in the end. He is the opposite of Ifemelu, he loved America but found that it was not when he expected when he arrived. He does not love his wife but is content with his life. Obinze spends much of the book having lost his way. While financially successful, most of his life seems only to be going through the motions. Unlike Ifemelu, instead of holding on to his convictions his worldview becomes gradually shaken up. Only when Ifemelu returns does he begin to rediscover who he really is.

Adichie also has masterful characterisation. Even the minor characters are shown with their own stories. Ifemelu spends six hours in a hair salon and by the end of it the reader feels as if they know her hairdresser as well as they know Ifemelu.

I loved Americanah. I stayed up until 1 a.m. reading it and didn't even realise it. READ THIS BOOK. If I haven't been enough to convince you of the power of Adichie's writing here's a review of her book Purple Hibiscus by a girl I was in class with:

"[I reached a certain part] and I flung the book across the room"**

*A term used for a Nigerian who goes to America and comes back in the novel. Please correct me if I'm wrong

** The good kind, the I don't know what to do with myself the author is so good kind


Thursday 2 April 2015

"Caribbean" accent

"You're from the Caribbean? Isn't that like Jamaica?"

 If you are from the Caribbean and have ever traveled outside, you have heard some variant of this. The first time you hear it you laugh it off and explain no, the Caribbean is an archipelago, made up of hundreds of islands. Yes some accents sound more similar than other but that's getting into phonetics.

 The reason for this blog is that I just finished reading Americanah by Chimanda Ngozi Adichie.* In it the main character Ifemelu, describes her driver as having a "Caribbean accent". I have no beef with Adichie, throughout the novel she allows her characters, even minor ones, to keep their national identity. This one instance struck me as strange, perhaps because of that. What is the Caribbean accent? It feels like it belongs to members of the Caribbean diaspora. Those who have left band together in voice to remember the lyrical patterns of home.

It certainly is not something Caribbean people agree about. Tell a Trinidadian that they sound like a Jamaican and see the look you get. Most Caribbean people can generally guess where you are by your accent. Of course there is the general "Small islander accent."**

I don't expect anyone outside of the Caribbean to instantly know what island a Caribbean person by accent. I just want it to be known we are not a homogenous society of white sand beaches and palm trees. We are not just a vacation destination. Know who we are.

 Bigger countries have no excuse anymore. America, you call us your backyard. And hey Britain, Spain and France! You colonised us for nearly 500 years, learn our names.

*Spoiler alert: It was fantastic like all her books are , I'll be posting a review later.

** I am so so sorry I am an arrogant Trinidadian bastard.