Don’t Call me Local

Don’t Call me Local

If you offer me an orange,

And I squeeze out the juice too hard,

And I turn it out to eat the carpels,

Please don’t call me local.

 

If, on a sunny day, we are out and about ,

And you say you feel like having

Cassava flakes immersed in ice,

And I ask if you meant garri and ice water,

Please don’t call me local.

 

If your sister is getting married,

And you serve me poulet a’la bretonne,

I put it aside and order for amala,
Please don’t call me local.

Bolanle, it is you who has now chosen to be Bolz,

Because you now use Iphone and work in Lekki;

Where you struggle to walk in borrowed stilettoes.

If you can’t diagnose yourself of dialectical tension,

Please don’t call me local!

 

 

One response to “Don’t Call me Local”

  1. Heryoub Avatar
    Heryoub

    We will surely oblige you MA.

    Like

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Hello,

I’m Tèmítọ́pẹ́

As a central analytic for the work of the institutional ethnographer, standpoint foregrounds the ways individuals are unique and therefore uniquely experience the broad social relations and institutional circuits in which they are embedded.
Standpoint recognizes that how people negotiate their social circumstances as professionals is entirely wrapped up in their ways of being in the world—­who we are, what we know, how we are seen by others, our designated roles, and how we have been credentialed or come by our experiences all play a role in how we carry out our daily work.

— Michelle LaFrance, Institutional Ethnography, 2019.