Ikhide Roland Ikheloa (born 14 February 1959) is a Nigerian writer and literary critic who has worked in the American civil service since 1984. He is widely read and known in Anglophone Africa for his strong opinions on literature and politics, which have won him many admirers and also made him very controversial. While he is seen as a writer and critic by his admirers, this position has often been debated by his critics. But Ikheloa simply refers to himself as a reader who writes and is highly opinionated.
He moved to the United States in 1982 to pursue a master's degree in Business Administration (MBA) at the University of Mississippi, from where he graduated in 1984.
Ikheloa is one of the most influential literary and social critics in Anglophone Africa. His essays on novels by African writers are widely read, and his opinions on books have often caused a stir in the literary world, including brief face-offs between him and the authors. In 2017, Ikheloa's essay on Fiston Mwanza Mujila's Tram 83 changed the conversation around the book forever.
Tram 83, having won the 2015 Etisalat Prize for Literature and been described by the Guardian as "the African novel wowing the literary world", looked set to become a classic. However, Ikheloa published an essay on his blog, pointing out the book's misogyny and inadequate portrayal of Africans as people who only eat, drink and have sexual intercourse. After a long argument, which took place for days in the media among some of Africa's biggest literary names, including Tsitsi Dangarembga, Petina Gappah, Zukiswa Wanner, Bwesigye Wa Mugire and Richard Oduor Oduku, the conversation around the book changed for ever.
Ikheloa is not just widely read, but prolific. He is said to have written on more books than any other critic within the past two decades.
He also writes on politics. It was during the political upheavals in Nigeria in the 1990s that his writing found life again after he became an activist. In the 1990s, after having lived in the United States for a decade, Ikheloa linked up with a few friends and bigwigs, including Wole Soyinka, Beko Ransome-Kuti, in a platform known as Naijanet to fight for MKO Abiola's stolen mandate.
They wrote and organised conferences, and traveled to reach people in the process. During Abacha's regime, Ikhide was a frequent guest at Radio Kudirat, one of the effective initiatives formed in Nigeria at the time to combat tyranny.
He has since continued to write about politics. He has said that although some friends entered politics in 1998, he held back in order to stay outside and work to hold folks accountable.
While Ikhide has often objected to being called a critic and styles himself "a reader who writes", his prolific work of literary criticism and commenting on social issues through books have earned him the status of a social critic and his unbridled opinions on books have led to him being called "Irreverent critic".
In 2014, at the height of the build-up to the General elections in 2015, Ikheloa fell out with a large part of the literary society in Nigeria for fiercely opposing writers and literary community who supported General Muhammadu Buhari's Presidency.
In 2017, Ikheloa called for the boycotting of the Kaduna Books and Arts Festival (KABAFEST) in its inaugural year on the grounds that its host, Mallam Nasir El Rufai, was responsible for the more than 300 Shi'ite Muslims who were killed and buried in mass graves in Kaduna.
Ikheloa is a well known champion for telling stories on digital platforms. He believes that the internet is the future of storytelling and has often said that the book as we know it is dead, whereas ideas (as in the internet) live. He has been described by Alexander Fyfe as one of the most visible online critics, whose contribution to the literary discourse online has led to the increasing visibility of African literature in the internet.
In September 2022, at the James Currey Festival at the University of Oxford, England, Ikheloa, during his acceptance speech of the Lifetime Achievement Award for literary criticism, advocated for more digital publishing opportunities in Nigeria.
Ikheloa has once participated in the Esan collective, which was held online, an attempt to help the condition of plummeting Esan speakers.
In 2016, Ikhide was listed in the Guardian UK's "The Lagos Power List: The 21 people in 21 Million."
"Ikhide Ikheloa, better known as Pa Ikhide, is a maverick in a social media environment that usually takes one side or the other in Nigerian politics. Few manage to escape his damning critiques – including the country's often-overlooked intellectual elite.The 57-year-old's no-holds-barred approach has earned his Twitter account, @ikhide, a substantial following, many of whom are political officials awaiting his next tirade."
"The greatest tragedy of modern literature is that those who are invested in the past, those who are welded to the book, hold strong sway over the trajectory of the world's stories. These powerful keepers of the gate of stories insist on reading to a bored, disengaged world, one-dimensional pap, milled from a flat world. Imagine where the world would be today if mathematicians had insisted on feeding us faded truths from the slide rule. Computers would be relegated to third class status to be patronized by the mummified wealthy. And we would not be here today...In a 2014 interview with Moonchild, when asked about New Nigerian writing, Ikhide expressed his sentiment that the present generation was easily the most innovative generation when it came to writing. According to him, because of what they did with social media, a number of them could be considered geniuses."On balance, the West has been supportive of African literature, but the Internet and social media house authentic African narrative, unlike the sanitized gruel from many traditional Western publishing houses. We must revive African narrative organically. Long live social media!"
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