What We Are Reading Today: Every Household Its Own Government

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Updated 10 March 2022
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What We Are Reading Today: Every Household Its Own Government

Author: Daniel Jordan Smith

When Nigerians say that every household is its own local government, what they mean is that the politicians and state institutions of Africa’s richest, most populous country cannot be trusted to ensure even the most basic infrastructure needs of their people.

Daniel Jordan Smith traces how innovative entrepreneurs and ordinary citizens in Nigeria have forged their own systems in response to these deficiencies, devising creative solutions in the daily struggle to survive.

Drawing on his three decades of experience in Nigeria, Smith examines the many ways Nigerians across multiple social strata develop technologies, businesses, social networks, political strategies, cultural repertoires, and everyday routines to cope with the constant failure of government infrastructure.

He describes how Nigerians provide for basic needs like water, electricity, transportation, security, communication, and education—and how their inventiveness comes with consequences.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Bell Jar’

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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Bell Jar’

  • The bell jar — clear, enclosing, and distorting the air she breathes — becomes the perfect image of Greenwood’s entrapment. Just as telling is the fig tree she imagines, with each fig representing a possible future: writer, traveler, mother, lover

Sylvia Plath’s “The Bell Jar” (1963) is a raw and luminous portrait of a young woman standing at the edge of adulthood, grappling with ambition, doubt, and the suffocating weight of expectation. 

Through the eyes of the novel’s troubled protagonist Esther Greenwood, Plath reveals the loneliness that can lie hidden beneath achievement and the unease brought on by future expectations.  

The novel opens in New York, where Greenwood’s magazine internship seems the gateway to success. Yet the city’s glamor soon feels hollow, and the confidence around her thin and brittle. 

Her sense of direction begins to fade, and the life laid out before her starts to feel both too small and impossibly distant.  

The bell jar — clear, enclosing, and distorting the air she breathes — becomes the perfect image of Greenwood’s entrapment. Just as telling is the fig tree she imagines, with each fig representing a possible future: writer, traveler, mother, lover. 

Torn between these possibilities, she hesitates until the figs shrivel and drop. This image, perhaps more than any other, reveals how fear of choice can quietly undo a person.   

Plath’s writing is sharp and deeply humane. She exposes the subtle pressures shaping women’s lives at that time without sentiment or complaint. 

The narrative’s erratic rhythm mirrors the character’s disoriented state of mind, where thought and memory blur at the edges. 

“The Bell Jar” speaks to anyone who has felt caught between possibility and paralysis, between who they are and who they are expected to be. 

Plath writes with precision and compassion, turning confusion into clarity and despair into something almost inspiring.