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  • Cited by 5
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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      May 2022
      May 2022
      ISBN:
      9781009211840
      9781009211857
      Creative Commons:
      Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC Creative Common License - ND
      This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0.
      https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses
      Dimensions:
      Weight & Pages:
      Dimensions:
      (198 x 129 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.19kg, 172 Pages
    • Subjects:
      Area Studies, African Studies, Sociology: General Interest, Sociology
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    Subjects:
    Area Studies, African Studies, Sociology: General Interest, Sociology

    Book description

    For the first time in human history, people aged over 65 now outnumber children under five. Yet one region in the world is bucking this trend: the world's top 20 youngest countries by population are all located in sub-Saharan Africa, and Africa's population under 35 now equals almost a billion people. Whilst there has been much research and reportage in the West around the lives of millennials and Gen Z, little has been written on the dreams and aspirations, the fears and hopes, the needs and desires of young Africans. The Yoruba expression Soro Soke, meaning “Speak Up”, has become a clarion call for young Nigerians seeking to make their voices heard, resonating across the African continent and around the world via social media. Trish Lorenz speaks to the bright new entrepreneurs, artists, and activists of Lagos and Abuja, Nigeria, to understand what it means to be young in an otherwise ageing world. This book is also available Open Access.

    Reviews

    'Soro Soke is a commendable and bold study into youth identity and politics in Nigeria, full of insights on popular culture and creativity, passion and politics. Trish Lorenz’s sympathy aligns with the desire of Nigerian youth activists committed to positive transformation. The author’s voice successfully captures the aspirations of young men and women, as well as their imaginations, to live in a new world of their own making. To imbibe the ethos of this book is to join Lorenz in continually repeating the slogan: Speak up!'

    Toyin Falola - author of Understanding Modern Nigeria

    'I wish this book existed when I was writing Welcome to Lagos. Trish Lorenz has done an excellent job of collating the hopes, dreams and frustrations of the young people of Lagos. They’re savvy, ambitious and they won’t take no for an answer. Watch out world. The soro soke generation is coming.'

    Chibundu Onuzo - author of Welcome to Lagos, Sankofa and The Spider King’s Daughter

    ‘Highly recommended.’

    M. M. Heaton Source: Choice

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    Contents

    Full book PDF

    Page 1 of 2


    • Frontmatter
      pp i-iv
    • Soro Soke
      pp i-ii
    • Soro Soke - Title page
      pp iii-iii
    • The Young Disruptors of an African Megacity
    • Contents
      pp v-vi
    • Copyright page
      pp iv-iv
    • List of Figures
      pp vii-viii
    • About the Nine Dots Prize
      pp ix-xii
    • Contents
      pp v-vi
    • Figures and Illustrations
      pp vii-viii
    • 1 - The Soro Soke Generation
      pp 1-15
    • 2 - The New York of Nigeria
      pp 16-30
    • About the Nine Dots Prize
      pp ix-xii
    • Speaking Out: Chekwube Okonkwo on Expressing African Identity
      pp 31-32
    • 1 - The Soro Soke Generation
      pp 1-15
    • 3 - Cultural Capital
      pp 33-41
    • 2 - The New York of Nigeria
      pp 16-30
    • Speaking Out: Chekwube Okonkwo on Expressing African Identity
      pp 31-32
    • Speaking Out: Osinachi on Art and Nigerian Identity
      pp 42-44
    • Speaking Out: Priscilla Eke on Feminism
      pp 45-46
    • 3 - Cultural Capital
      pp 33-41
    • Speaking Out: Osinachi on Art and Nigerian Identity
      pp 42-44
    • 4 - Challenging Norms
      pp 47-60
    • Speaking Out: Uyaiedu Ipke-Etim on Facing Homophobia
      pp 61-62
    • Speaking Out: Priscilla Eke on Feminism
      pp 45-46
    • 4 - Challenging Norms
      pp 47-60
    • Speaking Out: Michael Elégbèdé on the Diaspora
      pp 63-65
    • Speaking Out: Uyaiedu Ipke-Etim on Facing Homophobia
      pp 61-62
    • 5 - Japá
      pp 66-73
    • Speaking Out: Michael Elégbèdé on the Diaspora
      pp 63-65
    • Speaking Out: Davies Okeowo on Entrepreneurship
      pp 74-76

    Page 1 of 2


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