Mariama Bâ 1. Biographical Notes 1929 Born in Senegal. Loses her mother at a very tender age. Brought up by her grandparents
in a traditional Muslim environment. Her father, a Health Minister, sends her to a boarding school for girls, the “Ecole Normale des Jeunes Filles”, in Rufisque.
1947 Receives her Elementary School Teacher's Certificate. Teaches for 12 years. Leaves
teaching for health reasons. Teaching Commissioner for Senegal. Divorced mother of 9 children. Ex-husband: Député Obèye Diop.
1980 Prix Noma for her first Novel So Long A Letter. 1981 Dies just before the publication of her second book Un Chant Ecarlate [A Scarlet Song].
Was an active member of several Senegalese Women Associations. 2. Literary Work 1979 So Long A Letter (Dakar: Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines)
When her husband dies Ramatoulaye uses the 40 days of mourning prescribed by tradition to reflect on her life as a woman in a traditional polygamist society. Extremely successful novel which was translated into 12 languages.
1981 Un chant écarlate (Dakar: Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines)
Story of a Senegalese man and a French woman whose marriage collapses under the many difficulties a multiracial couple faces in an intolerant society. In this case, the marriage collapses because of the cowardness of the husband who abuses his wife.
Source: Ormerod, Beverly and Volet, Jean-Marie. Romancières africaines d'expression française: Le sud du Sahara. Paris: L'Harmattan, 1994.
3. Key Concepts to Understand So Long A Letter 3.1. Polygamy = Answer to
 Economic
 Social
 Ethnic needs of historical Africa  Husband not “master” = favorite social friend  More women than men in Africa
 Husband = Security + Fulfills woman's need to be a mother  Single woman = Anomaly in Africa  Girl = Brought up to be married  Tyranny of the mother-in-law  Cost of the fiancée
3.2. Islam and Polygamy
 Allows up to 4 wives
 Does not impose polygamy but allows it
 Should be an exception rather than a rule:
 A sick spouse prefers that husband legalize his situation
 A woman can stipulate that her husband stay monogamous
 A woman can refuse to marry an already married man 3.3. Widowhood
 One and a half month of mourning
 Widow stays home until purification ceremony after 40 days
 Widower can refuse to follow this custom & remarry one week after losing his wife
 Dangerous for wife because of her in-laws who can refuse to shelter her and her children
 Husband's belongings go to his family 3.4. Major Themes in Mariama Bâ’s Book
 Marriage conflicts
 Fidelity between spouses
 Traditional and modern view of marriage
 Education
 Money problems due to polygamy
 Pain & suffering of a women & children in a polygamist family
3.5. Three traditional couples in Mariama Bâ’s book
 Modou + Ramatoulaye (= alone + widowed)
 Mawdo Bâ + Aïssatou (= divorced)
 Samba Diack + Jacqueline (= nervous breakdown) = 3 Couples who grew up under colonialism
3.4. Role of the mother-in-law in the choosing of a wife?
 Old Nabou = Aïssatou’s mother-in-law
 Ramatoulaye's Mother-In-Law 3.5. How do Ramatoulaye's two oldest daughters view polygamy?
= 2 young couples  Young Aïssatou + her boyfriend Iba  Daba + her husband
3.6. Comparison of Ramatoulaye's + Aïssatou's co-wives:
Binetou Young Nabou
4. Discussion Topics for So Long A Letter
 Polygamy & the family structure  What roles does Ramatoulaye play in her family ?  The female characters in So Long a Letter  Men’s vs. Women’s view regarding polygamy  The consequences of polygamy
Adapted from:
 Larrier, Renée Brenda. Francophone women writers of Africa and the Caribbean. Gainesville : University Press of Florida, 2000.