Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The danger of a single story | TED

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @axeld2150
    @axeld2150 4 года назад +23091

    Well, well, well, well, look who is here from their classes in this corona time.

  • @dragasalt7493
    @dragasalt7493 4 года назад +23274

    POV: Your English teacher made a new assignment called "The Danger of a Single Story" with this video linked

    • @alexlane6940
      @alexlane6940 4 года назад +722

      bruh thats me rn

    • @AlstenE18
      @AlstenE18 4 года назад +311

      this is also me right now jsjkdj-

    • @casmentisaac3167
      @casmentisaac3167 4 года назад +180

      That is also me right now

    • @yaboiwonka8913
      @yaboiwonka8913 4 года назад +233

      She gave us a 20 minute video with 25 minutes left in class and we gotta finish b4 that

    • @Dylan-bl8dc
      @Dylan-bl8dc 4 года назад +54

      And you see this comment

  • @_curiouscat
    @_curiouscat 4 года назад +10968

    "that is how you create a single story, show a people as one thing. As only one thing, over and over again and that is what they become" 9:27
    "power is the ability to not just to tell the story of another person, but to make it the definitive story of that person" 10:13
    "The single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story" 13:12
    "The consequence of the single story is this: it robs people of dignity. It makes our recognition four equal humanity difficult, it emphasizes how we are different rather than how we are similar" 13:55
    "when we reject the single story. when we realize that there is never a single story of any place, we regain a kind of paradise" 18:22
    some highlights for yalls essays/assignments.

    • @valara1699
      @valara1699 4 года назад +388

      BLESS

    • @kadeemdrysdale1546
      @kadeemdrysdale1546 4 года назад +204

      I needed this 😂😂

    • @skydizzyy
      @skydizzyy 4 года назад +90

      omg!! thanks this helped me out!!!! xoxo

    • @leilanipeet
      @leilanipeet 4 года назад +72

      alo-san thanks for doing my homework for me 👍

    • @natcorrea7421
      @natcorrea7421 4 года назад +67

      THANK YOU!!! I just realized I needed some quotes and these were just the lines that I needed

  • @aritradas2059
    @aritradas2059 10 месяцев назад +1234

    this is a required reading that was given for a class today in 2024. the fact that this was spoken 14 years ago and is just as powerful as it was before is insane

    • @braydenreimann8718
      @braydenreimann8718 10 месяцев назад

      Purdue?

    • @Steveobrine_Official
      @Steveobrine_Official 8 месяцев назад +29

      Procrastinating on the assignment reading these comments 💀

    • @jessezhang1543
      @jessezhang1543 6 месяцев назад

      Substitute Africa for China and you'll probably have epiphany moment lol, if you also grew up with the "mainstream" western media

    • @caniscuriosum3386
      @caniscuriosum3386 5 месяцев назад +2

      Fourteen years ago really wasn't that long ago, but I get what you're saying.

    • @geea8509
      @geea8509 5 месяцев назад +2

      You mean "viewing". Nobody reads anymore thats the problem with education now. One of her books should be required READING in your class.

  • @ahmedmudassar8511
    @ahmedmudassar8511 8 лет назад +7442

    "The single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete"

    • @AqibA.C.
      @AqibA.C. 8 лет назад +288

      I loved that part. No negativity, only understanding.

    • @GrasshopperRDG
      @GrasshopperRDG 7 лет назад +41

      I absolutely* most definitely and emphatically agree with you on this, 100%!!!~

    • @haydengray4200
      @haydengray4200 7 лет назад +7

      Ahmed Mudassar well said

    • @TeKeyaKrystal
      @TeKeyaKrystal 6 лет назад +25

      that line stuck out to me as well !

    • @notyourtypicalgranny
      @notyourtypicalgranny 6 лет назад +93

      and our world is full of stereotypes - racial, religious, sexual and sexualities, gender, age etc. sometimes we find it easier to stereotype than to learn, to experience, to get to know, to understand. when we stereotype we take the easy way out and it deprives us of knowing the wonder that is humaniity in all it's different forms and that is truly sad

  • @kylebaker5069
    @kylebaker5069 4 года назад +3488

    "The single story creates stereotypes. And the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story." -Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 13:10

    • @siomonfuller5567
      @siomonfuller5567 4 года назад +25

      You are intelligent man bro..you just inspired me

    • @TDPlayz
      @TDPlayz 3 года назад +47

      @@siomonfuller5567 wait what

    • @ifunanyaonwujekwe2936
      @ifunanyaonwujekwe2936 3 года назад +70

      @@siomonfuller5567 whaatt... Thats just a quote of what the lady was saying...

    • @katieallen3142
      @katieallen3142 3 года назад +11

      this was my main takeaway as well!

    • @PaleRook
      @PaleRook 3 года назад +15

      I always found it weird that you can spin this to have her be the one making stereotypes about stereotypes using her one perspective 🤔

  • @jonahlindhe756
    @jonahlindhe756 4 года назад +3631

    Why is noone talking about how good of a speaker she is?

    • @LeonWilias
      @LeonWilias 4 года назад +154

      I imagine because we are not surprised a popular, university educated, author can do public speaking. Why did you feel this was worth pointing out?

    • @jonahlindhe756
      @jonahlindhe756 4 года назад +250

      @@LeonWilias It was a compliment. It is rare to see someone give a presentation without long pauses, filler words and "um"s. I really just wanted to point out that she was a great speaker, I might have phrased it the wrong way, but I couldn't find any other comments about it.

    • @LeonWilias
      @LeonWilias 4 года назад +93

      @@jonahlindhe756 apologies for being accusatory, but when I hear that comment about POC it reminds me of Chris rocks "he speaks so well" routine, which I would warn has rather strong language

    • @jonahlindhe756
      @jonahlindhe756 4 года назад +8

      @@LeonWiliasok!

    • @liviaa.c.4908
      @liviaa.c.4908 3 года назад +23

      Right? My anxiety could never

  • @ayah_sjsu
    @ayah_sjsu Год назад +957

    This is FOURTEEN years old, and it STILL resonates so deeply! There are wars happening because those who have power are bending the narrative and only showing one side of the story. God bless you, Chimamanda.

    • @lamilekanhamzah
      @lamilekanhamzah Год назад +15

      Honestly, it's a timeless speech

    • @singingalbert3623
      @singingalbert3623 Год назад

      @@lamilekanhamzahyeah honestly its over rated

    • @Prof.SeverusSnape
      @Prof.SeverusSnape 11 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@singingalbert3623 reading isn't your skill suit.😊

    • @kelvisaisawesome
      @kelvisaisawesome 9 месяцев назад +4

      Yea I came here last year because of my English teacher, this year I came because of my English prof. Truly an amazing speech and an important idea to be aware of

    • @kelvisaisawesome
      @kelvisaisawesome 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@Prof.SeverusSnape”this is a timeless piece”
      “I agree, this is trash”
      “What?”
      “What?”

  • @toluwasethomas600
    @toluwasethomas600 3 года назад +3317

    Her story telling skills is top-notch.
    Her narration is captivating.
    Her story makes me want to become a storyteller myself.

    • @natalieguzman1063
      @natalieguzman1063 3 года назад +33

      if only i could speak as intelligent as she delivers, i could only wish! shes simply amazing!!

    • @toluwasethomas600
      @toluwasethomas600 3 года назад +36

      @@Mgbaks this isnt just about being brilliant because everyone is brilliant in their rights.
      It's about learning the skill of story telling, and just like any other skill out there, this can be learned too.
      You just need the right teacher or right resources to learn it.
      Like you said its possible to hit a wall in the learning process, but fact is that, any wall can be surmounted
      Of course we all have different learning pace, but with consistency and hard work time and right mindset, you can be a better storyteller

    • @toluwasethomas600
      @toluwasethomas600 3 года назад +20

      ​@@Mgbaks Actually, what gives mastery in a skill or vocation is consistency, hardwork and practice. Definitely not merely IQ.
      I agree that high IQ "may" give you an edge at the beginning compared to other folks with lower IQ.
      But consistency and hardwork is more powerful on the long-run in order to achieve mastery.
      A person with high IQ but little or no consistency will hardly achieve mastery. Chimamanda in this case has been. tremendously consistent and hardworking in public speaking, writing and delivery, thats why she is this excellent.
      I believe that any other person can achieve the same mastery with commensurate level of diligence and hardwork and consistency

    • @emmanuelibu3620
      @emmanuelibu3620 3 года назад +14

      The conversation here between Toluwase & Ryan just emphasizes the reason why Nigerians - especially those in the diaspora - do relatively better than other Africans. Our relentless belief in achieving the seemingly unachievable is second to none.
      Dear @Natalie Guzman, believe me talent is important but nothing beats hard work & consistency, if you put in constant effort, I promise you'd be a better speaker than Adichie in no time, just believe in yourself okay.
      For the record Adichie didn't grow up speaking publicly, she was actually a science student in secondary school here in Nigeria, that means she had little to no background in literature, I know this because I was one, she even started off as a medical student in the University before leaving for the US.
      You can be anything you want to be okay. Believe it!

    • @toluwasethomas600
      @toluwasethomas600 3 года назад +11

      @@emmanuelibu3620 Exactly! Exactly!!
      "You can be anything you want to be okay. Believe it!"
      Thats the word. Thats the mindset. Thats the key.
      Thank you for the input Emmanuel

  • @mbxo__5936
    @mbxo__5936 4 года назад +2373

    Didn’t come here because of school, just to hear this brilliant woman give very valuable insight.

    • @halezsocial408
      @halezsocial408 4 года назад +84

      EXACTLY LIKE WTF IS WRONG WITH PEOPLE how are people only commenting about their school essays they have to do rather than the amazing woman who is talking

    • @turtlemandead979
      @turtlemandead979 4 года назад +41

      @@halezsocial408 it’s because we were assigned this and most of the time when. A teacher assigns something you do it and don’t care about what it’s about

    • @petrah4775
      @petrah4775 4 года назад +40

      I came here because of school. and im very glad that I got to watch this amazing speach

    • @lucashbn
      @lucashbn 4 года назад +9

      Brazil loves this woman!!!

    • @joegreene328
      @joegreene328 3 года назад

      boooooo

  • @RodfulRod
    @RodfulRod 5 лет назад +5116

    Who’s here because of English homework? And this Ted Talk is actually interesting

  • @teeihezue
    @teeihezue 2 года назад +1429

    12 years later and this talk is as educating as it's captivating ❤️

    • @Koruvax
      @Koruvax 2 года назад +16

      I come back every other year or so and listen again. It's such an incredible message.

    • @eflteacherayala
      @eflteacherayala 2 года назад +7

      @@Koruvax me too

    • @VenemoussonYT
      @VenemoussonYT 2 года назад +2

      EPS PEOPLE PLEASE COMMENT

    • @megxoCFC
      @megxoCFC Год назад +2

      13years strong 💪💪💪

    • @chikezieokorocha5994
      @chikezieokorocha5994 Год назад +1

      Absolutely!!

  • @anantikamehra1694
    @anantikamehra1694 8 лет назад +1568

    She speaks so eloquently, and yet is not at all pretentious. Love her!

    • @tec-jones5445
      @tec-jones5445 6 лет назад +2

      @The Great Cornholio my sentiments exactly!

    • @owenzhang5008
      @owenzhang5008 6 лет назад

      three@@tec-jones5445

    • @nadie1mayascuz
      @nadie1mayascuz 6 лет назад +2

      Black women don't do this with pretention

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu 5 лет назад +4

      Black speaks English! Clap!

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu 5 лет назад +1

      @@nadie1mayascuz such bullshit. I was looking up real feminist literature and YT diverted me here. "Fearless" woman!... Ayan Hirsi Ali.
      Tokens abound. TED used to be...

  • @niarey3712
    @niarey3712 4 года назад +528

    Can we just take a moment and admire her intelligence and regal beauty wow.

    • @neooooo6127
      @neooooo6127 4 года назад +8

      no

    • @muhammadhassan8745
      @muhammadhassan8745 4 года назад +11

      nah everyone here is making jokes about how this is assigned for school no time for that

    • @teocatnation4818
      @teocatnation4818 4 года назад +16

      She’s really pretty, I love her voice.

    • @3p1ks
      @3p1ks 4 года назад +7

      Can we just take a moment to admire the fact that we were given this for homework?

    • @muhammadhassan8745
      @muhammadhassan8745 4 года назад

      @@3p1ks well depends on what part you wanna admire about the fact that we were given this for homework

  • @carlbensoncarreon4593
    @carlbensoncarreon4593 9 лет назад +2826

    My idea about Africa has changed after I listened to her speech. Indeed, there is a danger of a single story. Very inspiring and informative.

    • @solpan6828
      @solpan6828 9 лет назад +94

      +Manong Caloy i think her point was not only africa but also any race and just to not listen to one story of a situation but to also try to see both sides as well

    • @MythologySkate
      @MythologySkate 9 лет назад +11

      me too. this was truly amazing.

    • @elizabetha2809
      @elizabetha2809 9 лет назад +136

      Yes really informative. When I moved from Nigeria to Canada. I got a job in no time, I was told I performed best at my interview. When I started working, my colleagues were shocked at my English and communication skills. They kept asking me where I learnt how to speak English. I told them everything I learnt were from my Nigerian education and that was the first time I would move out of my country. My husband answered the same ridiculous questions, as people were asking him if there were houses in Nigeria. They had formed a stereotype of Nigerians just from the "SOS sponsor-a-child advert videos they see on TV" I saw those videos too, those places were villages of countries in Africa. And you could sponsor a child as was the gesture offered due to pity from the white people. But they didn't know that those were rural areas and that doesn't mean there are no cities. In Canada, I have seen homeless people on the streets looking really dirty and unkempt. And I was shocked as well.

    • @carlosalejandrofernandez5394
      @carlosalejandrofernandez5394 7 лет назад +2

      Manong Caloy hombre sexi

    • @ChicoMds
      @ChicoMds 7 лет назад +35

      Yeah same here, she is also a very good communicator.
      I love the way she speaks!

  • @AngryGroceries0
    @AngryGroceries0 Год назад +614

    "The single story creates stereotypes. And the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story." This is the quote I most resonated with and my main takeaway. This is an excellent way of looking at things.

    • @ihyDJ2x
      @ihyDJ2x Год назад +39

      imma just take this for my essay...
      ily

    • @Bongbongo
      @Bongbongo Год назад

      ong this came in clutch ☠ bro has no idea what he's done for us @@ihyDJ2x

    • @PartridgeAves
      @PartridgeAves Год назад +4

      ​@@ihyDJ2xyeah that's what you can do only instead of reflecting on what she said

    • @ihyDJ2x
      @ihyDJ2x Год назад +7

      @@PartridgeAves I did reflect, and I didn't sit here and cry in yt comments so yk

    • @danthiel8623
      @danthiel8623 Год назад

      yes

  • @joyce7591
    @joyce7591 4 года назад +1661

    This lady has just allowed me to view Africa in a different light. I am a shame to admit that I am guilty of what she described... i have always viewed Africa as the media has described it. I have never truly tried to understand the people and for that i will now apologize.

    • @dleoner1
      @dleoner1 4 года назад +125

      Joyce, it’s a beautiful thing once you begin to see things the way they’re intended to be seen: through YOUR own lens.
      I love learning new things about cultures and ethnicities around the world, it gives me a better understanding of how to navigate society but also call out the crappy media who continue to paint with such broad brush strokes.

    • @danielfayemi2823
      @danielfayemi2823 4 года назад +1

      @Joe and who may have told you this?

    • @quicksilver0294
      @quicksilver0294 4 года назад +44

      At least you have recognized your own faults and are doing better - I too have some work to do.

    • @zgirl-8592
      @zgirl-8592 4 года назад +35

      Joyce me being half African I personally forgive you and thank you for being kind enough to know the real story 😁

    • @nullptr5740
      @nullptr5740 4 года назад +2

      im the 5th reply

  • @richardparsons7343
    @richardparsons7343 5 лет назад +2311

    I love this! It parallels the saying, "Until the Lion tells the story the hunter will always be glorified".

    • @emilyniemen5251
      @emilyniemen5251 5 лет назад +5

      please could you explain what this saying means?

    • @truegrit4752
      @truegrit4752 5 лет назад +33

      I never heard that saying, but I love it!!

    • @boryanadzhivdzhanova5369
      @boryanadzhivdzhanova5369 5 лет назад +49

      To me it means that you need more than one story (the other side of the story) in order to gain understanding, rather than take sides. :)

    • @1jeromeo
      @1jeromeo 5 лет назад +111

      @@emilyniemen5251 History is written by the victors. Until you hear the `loser's´ story, you haven't heard the whole story.

    • @mitchellphillips4691
      @mitchellphillips4691 5 лет назад +4

      The saying is better than the video lol

  • @sidneyrobinson18
    @sidneyrobinson18 9 лет назад +2346

    Its people like her who change the world for the better

    • @Larindarr
      @Larindarr 9 лет назад +102

      +Sidney Robinson and it is people like her that need out full and massive support. How? listening opening our minds, eyes and hearts. She is the seed, we are the earth, no earth, no plant to grow, no change to grow.

    • @andrewkingsley9715
      @andrewkingsley9715 8 лет назад +19

      +Sidney Robinson I agree. She protected us all from the single sturrrys

    • @davidgn40
      @davidgn40 6 лет назад +19

      @insane hermit idk what's with you making this about race lol don't get so triggered, this video is years old and there didn't seem to be anything racist against whites, just against stereotypes.

    • @bestrocksinger3513
      @bestrocksinger3513 6 лет назад +1

      Sidney Robinson
      Indeed

    • @bestrocksinger3513
      @bestrocksinger3513 6 лет назад +1

      Apam Merlo
      Do you really mean that?

  • @danderry2904
    @danderry2904 Год назад +267

    Who else is just discovering this speach in 2023 👏👏 chimamanda is a living legend because the single story has become even more true in our present day.

  • @ladystardust5061
    @ladystardust5061 7 лет назад +543

    This was in 2009?!?!?! It still fits with what's going on now nearly 10 years later. Such an amazing speech and woman. So glad my professor made me watch it!

    • @Fificherie
      @Fificherie 5 лет назад +5

      10 years now 😊

    • @SincerePresence
      @SincerePresence 5 лет назад

      Yes indeed! Such a sad truth

    • @wokeaf1337
      @wokeaf1337 5 лет назад +4

      and will fit in 10 years from now as well

    • @Dustshoe
      @Dustshoe 5 лет назад +1

      The ignorant live blissfully on.

    • @tell-it7649
      @tell-it7649 4 года назад +3

      Honestly and can you believe there racist in this same comment section insulting Mexicans Africans and other groups. Its unbelievable how retards never change.

  • @kikiellender5228
    @kikiellender5228 5 лет назад +2601

    If you watch this in 2019 you are going to be great

  • @frogmn9406
    @frogmn9406 Год назад +145

    I'm so glad that I clicked on this video. I come from China and in the US, I was often asked "what do you think of the CCP/democracy"? "Do you have freedom?" by people who barely know me. These questions appeared very offensive to me but I didn't know how to convey this feeling of discomfort to people. Whenever I say, there's so much more a person than her/his political idealogies, and Chinese people have complex thoughts and lives, westerners think I'm defending CCP or I'm against democracy or something. Now, this speech illuminated me. It doesn't matter whether how I think of a certain subject matter, the reason why I felt offended is because when they see a Chinese person, they think of totalitarianism, censorship, and you name it, just like when they see a Mexican person, they think of immigration. This single story "robbed me of dignity" (14:00 ). Now I'm back in China. It's spring now, and there are bamboo shoots on the mountains in the region where I live. This weekend, my family is driving to the mountains to pick bamboo shoots and we're gonna make a bamboo shoots feast. This is just a very trivial story that randomly came up to my mind, but it is as important as any other story, unfortunately no one from the west has ever heard of them.

    • @Bell_plejdo568p
      @Bell_plejdo568p 10 месяцев назад +1

      There country isn't a "democracy" and the also don't care they only do this to feel superior

    • @DezSher
      @DezSher 2 месяца назад +2

      you also have a single story of Westerners "no one from the west has ever heard of them". This is a single story, a stereotype.

  • @4eva_tim
    @4eva_tim 3 года назад +1607

    When she speaks.. I feel proud to see an educated woman who is just like me representing AFRICANS WELL. This woman gives me the confidence that I need.

    • @brianal7143
      @brianal7143 2 года назад +27

      She’s hands down one of my favorite authors. She’s Toni Morrison level, she’s a gem 🙌🏾

    • @nnennajohn9743
      @nnennajohn9743 2 года назад +9

      I couldn't have said this better. She's amazing!❤️

    • @TheMissionLog
      @TheMissionLog 2 года назад +5

      But are you an "Authentic African" ;P

    • @nahumflores7182
      @nahumflores7182 2 года назад +3

      @@TheMissionLog Amazing! There are great story tellers in all different levels of humanity. However, you find the best story tellers in the margins. The only problem is that they don't have a platform like this, but that doesn't matter because their stories transmit value and knowledge in their communal living.

  • @schiros123
    @schiros123 3 года назад +1038

    "I just read a novel called American Psycho" Vicious lady. I'm in love.

  • @mirelasemanjaku
    @mirelasemanjaku 5 лет назад +874

    Nigeria must be very proud to have her as a daughter and representative of the country. She is beautiful, smart and intellectual. I wish there were more women like her. I am very impressed!

    • @queeniwearth
      @queeniwearth 5 лет назад +114

      There are many Nigerian women like this.

    • @angeg100
      @angeg100 5 лет назад +20

      About the same way your country might be proud of you. She is a reg black woman. "Imagine

    • @paularep
      @paularep 5 лет назад +13

      Queen I-Wisdom Earth this! And also I find kinda annoying the first good quality is ‘being beautiful’

    • @blackmaleeconomicempowerme6286
      @blackmaleeconomicempowerme6286 5 лет назад +19

      @Someone from Israel what are u talking about?

    • @ElijahShawmaliciousboy
      @ElijahShawmaliciousboy 5 лет назад +31

      @Someone from Israel Lmfao thank generous white people? You do realize that most of the world relys on africa for resources right? They were thriving well before white people came

  • @chiemeka4709
    @chiemeka4709 Год назад +296

    One of the greatest Ted talk ever delivered. How Chimamanda breaks down words and communicate her thoughts to her audience is out of this world.

  • @babakhanoushii
    @babakhanoushii 8 лет назад +903

    I could listen to her speak for days. I love that voice, as well as what she has to say.

    • @tabithakemunto7915
      @tabithakemunto7915 8 лет назад +6

      Waleed Khan true

    • @britneealisaprescod3780
      @britneealisaprescod3780 7 лет назад +2

      Waleed Khan she is fluent the best I have seen to date. I am floored #wow

    • @warlegend4685
      @warlegend4685 7 лет назад +1

      can anyone help me my sir said that I've to watch this vedio and answer the question but I didn't understand the video.

    • @babakhanoushii
      @babakhanoushii 7 лет назад +7

      ÂĦMƏÐ ÂĦMƏÐ I also had to watch this for my first year of college, when I originally posted this comment. If you're still confused, a gross simplification of her message is that she's talking about the nature of stereotypes, and how they formulate when we only hear one type of "story" about a certain group of people.

    • @thejoesilverbackshow
      @thejoesilverbackshow 5 лет назад +2

      She has a keen intelligence and she has the ability to refrain from blanket statements. There is great strength in such calmness.

  • @kinglordehud
    @kinglordehud 3 года назад +1179

    I'm seeing this in 2021 and it is still equally relevant as it was.

    • @norahstansberry6706
      @norahstansberry6706 3 года назад +15

      Me too, am in love with a Nigerian man and find myself falling in love with everything Nigeria. My Naija man is a victim of the single story where my friends and family are concerned. When i tell them about his music and wonderful lyrics i just get puzzled looks. Well today 2 Naija artists, Burna Boy and WhizKid won Grammy Awards. Add another story to the library.

    • @norahstansberry6706
      @norahstansberry6706 3 года назад +2

      Ehud, my comment was to you

    • @munaaliii
      @munaaliii 3 года назад +5

      infact more important than ever... blm in 2020

    • @joysonia6654
      @joysonia6654 2 года назад +1

      Am just seeing it today

    • @juliapilgrim6074
      @juliapilgrim6074 2 года назад +1

      So am I and I agree.

  • @leonardowild6565
    @leonardowild6565 9 лет назад +357

    This is the kind of speech that, within 19 minutes and 16 seconds, can not only make you see and think differently of Africa, South America and the rest of the world, but about a way to look for those stories that we aren't being told ... or told repeatedly so they become the only way we can look at reality.

    • @juliusjulius5960
      @juliusjulius5960 6 лет назад +2

      Inspired. ...great mind, great revelation there

    • @michaelheery7427
      @michaelheery7427 5 лет назад

      They have very little example to learn from in general.

  • @favouramy8348
    @favouramy8348 6 месяцев назад +106

    14 years ago and I am still listening...who else is in this boat with me?

  • @nancynavarro-leca3634
    @nancynavarro-leca3634 9 лет назад +253

    Chimamanda is not just beautiful on the outside but a beautiful human being. She is insightful, compassionate and truly understands how stereo types are formed.

    • @markuy5485
      @markuy5485 6 лет назад +2

      Nancy Navarro-Leca what is the standard of beauty?

  • @bethanycouture486
    @bethanycouture486 3 года назад +391

    Her complexion is just GORGEOUS! All glowing and perfect..

  • @sarahmiller7214
    @sarahmiller7214 8 лет назад +261

    Almost cried. What a strong, beautiful and smart woman. She's a ray of hope and I aspire to be like her.

    • @abubakariisah1725
      @abubakariisah1725 6 лет назад

      Sarah Miller h

    • @abubakariisah1725
      @abubakariisah1725 6 лет назад

      Sarah Miller h

    • @michaelheery7427
      @michaelheery7427 5 лет назад +1

      Wish AFRICANS STOP LOOKING FOR MONEY.

    • @radiance65
      @radiance65 5 лет назад

      That's nice dear, but aspire to be like you. No one can be a better you than you.

    • @kamzamosweu2269
      @kamzamosweu2269 5 лет назад +3

      @@radiance65 nothing wrong with someone inspiring the other,, I think she means in terms of achieving her goals and doing what she love.

  • @JAMoore-zz3ki
    @JAMoore-zz3ki 2 года назад +189

    I'm in college in Colorado, and so far TWO of my respective college professors have assigned us to watch this video. Such an important message. Thank you.
    EDIT: As of today, Oct 18, THREE professors have now assigned this video. Its message is timeless.

    • @isaaconah1495
      @isaaconah1495 Год назад +1

      Wow that's wonderful

    • @Emmatriaaa
      @Emmatriaaa Год назад +6

      I’ve had to write and reflect about this TED talk all throughout high school and college.

    • @moranni
      @moranni Год назад +1

      Do you go to msu denver?

    • @imashj1
      @imashj1 11 месяцев назад +2

      Interestingly enough the same thing happened to me! Two professors assigned this video in the same semester within a week of each other.

    • @Imonjai_
      @Imonjai_ 7 месяцев назад

      I'm weak asab same

  • @beayn
    @beayn 8 лет назад +1582

    I absolutely love how there isn't a hint of racism in her. This is the kind of person who needs to lead the world to betterment.

    • @apeaceofegg4me
      @apeaceofegg4me 8 лет назад +82

      black ppl cant be racist, and reverse racism doesnt exist

    • @beayn
      @beayn 8 лет назад +95

      angelique lol... You're either a troll or an SJW. Go look up the meaning of racism instead of trying to redefine it to suit your purposes.

    • @RosalieMaryRose
      @RosalieMaryRose 8 лет назад +35

      black people can be racism to white person, well, and many do

    • @EchNPals
      @EchNPals 8 лет назад +27

      +RosalieMaryRose can be racism?

    • @choconutbuns
      @choconutbuns 8 лет назад +87

      Blacks can be racist towards other pocs; if it's towards non poc it is called prejudice. The main difference between prejudice and racism, is that with racism, the stereotypes and assumptions of a group keeps them oppressed; since whites are not oppressed like pocs, it leans more towards prejudice.

  • @SethWatersVlogs
    @SethWatersVlogs 10 лет назад +503

    "Stories matter. Many stories matter. Stories have been used to dispossess and to malign, but stories can also be used to empower and to humanize. Stories can break the dignity of a people, but stories can also repair that broken dignity....When we reject the single story, when we realize that there is never a single story about any place, we regain a kind of paradise." - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

    • @melanie_felony
      @melanie_felony 9 лет назад +8

      Seth Waters Great quote, that one is.

    • @cynthia41161
      @cynthia41161 9 лет назад +9

      Seth Waters Very powerful quote...I could listen to her speak forever...she is so articulate in her wording and making others understand what she is implying....

    • @SethWatersVlogs
      @SethWatersVlogs 9 лет назад +10

      cynthia41161 I agree! Though, I would say it's not implying. it is outright saying it: have a single story of any person, persons, or place, is harmful to everyone.

    • @cynthia41161
      @cynthia41161 9 лет назад +5

      Absolutely! What I mean when I say implying is a strong suggestion that there are implications to a single story...thanks for your reply Seth Waters...

  • @theloneliesttoad8255
    @theloneliesttoad8255 10 лет назад +141

    I am now eternally indebted to my English teacher for introducing me to this wonderful mind.

  • @dazz-reacts
    @dazz-reacts 6 месяцев назад +27

    As a digital nomad who has spent time with Americans, Mexicans, Indonesians, Indians, and Thai people, I've come to realize the importance of travel in understanding the true reality.
    It's through these diverse experiences that we break free from the confines of the "matrix" and gain a genuine appreciation for the richness of human existence.
    So let's keep moving, keep exploring, and keep embracing the world in all its diversity!

  • @eeman13
    @eeman13 5 лет назад +194

    10 years later.
    Her words are so strong.
    Perspective changing.

  • @skaterdbl
    @skaterdbl 8 лет назад +670

    She came to my high school and is such an honest, true talent. Such an amazing speaker and so brutally honest.

    • @wormgoblin5048
      @wormgoblin5048 5 лет назад +1

      That must of been amazing getting to talk to a peer and watching them take a passion or a talent and watch it flurish. I'd be proud to used or know someone like that.

    • @pinkytumi4208
      @pinkytumi4208 5 лет назад

      Which school?

    • @sackmajik
      @sackmajik 5 лет назад +2

      @insane hermit What a bizarre comment.

    • @godofgamers3884
      @godofgamers3884 5 лет назад +3

      insane hermit sorry, my parents are African but I was born in North America. If you tell me to go home then I’ll just stay here, because this is my home.

    • @kamzamosweu2269
      @kamzamosweu2269 5 лет назад +2

      @insane hermit she never said that, she said they are many stories about Africa, not only your story. Maybe you should travel to Africa to understand her.

  • @dexterdamonkey
    @dexterdamonkey 11 лет назад +139

    she is such a good speaker. very articulate, calm, organized - i watch her talks to learn a lot of things, and how to talk is a big one.

  • @sarahanurika3895
    @sarahanurika3895 2 года назад +55

    "When we reject the single story, when we realized there is never a single story about any place..we regain a kind of paradise"..Awesome!👏👏

  • @orangemushroominfield
    @orangemushroominfield 8 лет назад +1068

    This is why I want to travel. I want to discover countries and their people for myself, not the single stories I hear in Western media. I may not engage with all of them, but at least, more than a single one.

    • @orangemushroominfield
      @orangemushroominfield 8 лет назад +10

      Yeah, listening and learning from experienced travellers are always very interesting.

    • @rohanpuri7899
      @rohanpuri7899 8 лет назад +35

      “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime.”
      ― Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad/Roughing It
      But we aren't all privileged enough to travel. So our preconceived notions can't really be challenged since all we have is a single story of the truth. One sole interpretation of reality that is bound to a an inadequate and distorted one. We can however, attempt to crush our preconceptions by questioning what be take to be truths. Before we can move on to change people mentalities on big issues, we need to make them challenge the mundane.

    • @orangemushroominfield
      @orangemushroominfield 8 лет назад +15

      Rohan Puri Very well said! And too true. Until I have enough money and independence to travel, I can still educate myself and always challenge narrow world views.

    • @jafaark
      @jafaark 7 лет назад

      so true Kalil!

    • @aaminahasan6270
      @aaminahasan6270 7 лет назад +3

      Traveling is the antidote for ignorance- Treaor noah

  • @asiaword947
    @asiaword947 3 года назад +2118

    This is by far one of the best assignments I’ve ever had.. I enjoyed every min of this message and understood it’s importance for being taught. I hope everyone would truly glean from the words spoken. I am joyed to spend my school dollars on diverse teaching and studying. It’s thought provoking which better shapes our minds and attitudes. Thus, this is beyond a classroom assignment if you truly reflect on it.

    • @chippios
      @chippios 3 года назад +5

      dwadwawdawddawdfgjgzdadawfsdzovxcvd

    • @lgjoojaahyffakaffejavlahaha
      @lgjoojaahyffakaffejavlahaha 3 года назад

      @@chippios ashgdashdgaghasdgasdgjasghasdghasdag

    • @That0nepinecone
      @That0nepinecone 3 года назад

      @@lgjoojaahyffakaffejavlahaha gsuajdnajsvdhabjhdusm,samhdqt8wukkhasuivghcc

    • @stinkyToilet-u3l
      @stinkyToilet-u3l 3 года назад

      @@That0nepinecone
      Nensjamnukdnainsinaonbyiabhxonwuonwi.

    • @anidroid1540
      @anidroid1540 3 года назад +53

      Bro I’m in freshman year and I fell asleep 5 minutes into her talking

  • @yangto996
    @yangto996 3 года назад +1079

    "When we reject the single-story, when we realize that there is never a single story about any place - we regain a kind of paradise." I adore this woman!

    • @qsnakeyk9732
      @qsnakeyk9732 3 года назад +3

      i need a explanation of this sentence

    • @Saff_TV
      @Saff_TV 3 года назад +25

      When you stop looking at things,people , situations, one sided and you expand your mind to see from a different perspective,the story changes... To something more favouable,most times.

    • @Lina-ws3sy
      @Lina-ws3sy 2 года назад +8

      Me too! Not only that she is a storytelling genius, she is also a lucid voice of a future world. :)

    • @az4daze
      @az4daze 2 года назад

      @Zeko💤 around 18:00

    • @nnennajohn9743
      @nnennajohn9743 2 года назад

      💛❤️

  • @iofprovidenceonu
    @iofprovidenceonu Год назад +31

    I am from Assam India and have watched this profounding speech when it was released and It's 2023 August today yet I still come back to this though provoking,illuminating and eye opening speech.
    This speech is perfect in so many ways that it'll always remain relevant as long as the human society exist no matter the decades.

  • @tichamedia9943
    @tichamedia9943 9 лет назад +783

    I really enjoyed this. I wish Chimamanda Adichie would also tell Africans about the single story we hear aboutlavish lifestyles in Europe and USA. They make African people risk their lives for example on the Mediterranean sea with the hope of going to a heavenly place only to find there are actually more hardships waiting fo them in Europe and USA than in Africa.

    • @faustinaobaro4650
      @faustinaobaro4650 8 лет назад +53

      +Helen Wanjiru That's such a good point

    • @GreaterDeity
      @GreaterDeity 8 лет назад +7

      +Helen Wanjiru Yes!

    • @TheMindMan
      @TheMindMan 8 лет назад +63

      Read her book "Americanah"! I'm sure you will find interesting as it takes up that.

    • @Onlineintrovert
      @Onlineintrovert 7 лет назад +40

      I agree with you sister. My dream is that one day Africa as a whole will be prosperous and the needy will flee to there to seek aid and shelter. When will our nations realize unity is the way to success and end all forms of corruption? 🤔🤔😩

    • @heritetiene4733
      @heritetiene4733 7 лет назад +2

      The Mind Man

  • @christinaboccard9891
    @christinaboccard9891 8 лет назад +100

    This is phenomenal. I love how she expresses the importance of how literature can perceive another idea of what a culture is "supposed" to be like, and not always exactly what they are.

  • @johnphillips4909
    @johnphillips4909 4 года назад +377

    This is probably the best TED Talk I've seen.

    • @suzeac404
      @suzeac404 4 года назад +7

      John Phillips I know right! Was thinking exactly the same thing.

    • @aaliyahmccall8562
      @aaliyahmccall8562 4 года назад +6

      Yes without a doubt there's so much to reflect on.

    • @realerdealers1924
      @realerdealers1924 4 года назад +1

      This is the best ted talk you’ve ever seen
      ruclips.net/video/KTJn_DBTnrY/видео.html

    • @plumrexsupreme1038
      @plumrexsupreme1038 4 года назад +2

      You should watch the procrastination one

    • @jedijazzygamer5369
      @jedijazzygamer5369 4 года назад

      You’re so right, it is really good

  • @jagjots3555
    @jagjots3555 Год назад +43

    13 yrs on & her speech is still relevant. Thank you Chimamanda for giving us all a mirror to show others & also to use it to look within ourselves - how perceptions & judgements are formed. It is powerful..

  • @iwantyouinthissong
    @iwantyouinthissong 7 лет назад +556

    I am mexican, I came to visit the USA and all of my friends were surprised that I didn't hve to work and I came to see things with my money. This made me feel so angry but I found this video which I shared with them.

    • @schmitty918
      @schmitty918 7 лет назад

      Jesus Gt yes?

    • @olaolga
      @olaolga 6 лет назад +10

      Well, perhaps you can tell the other Mexicans that they don't have to run the border and how to make money at home?

    • @LinneAzalea
      @LinneAzalea 6 лет назад +34

      I’m sorry to hear that happened and I hope that maybe you helped teaching those people that there’s not just a single story about Mexico/Mexicans! Also please ignore the idiot above. This amazing 20 minutes video obviously went straight over his/her head.

    • @olaolga
      @olaolga 6 лет назад +1

      And here comes a virtue signaling moron!

    • @LinneAzalea
      @LinneAzalea 6 лет назад +25

      Dude, I feel for you. Still seeing only a single story about Mexicans, even after watching someone explain it in such a clear way, must mean you are not a very bright crayon.

  • @robyn6074
    @robyn6074 9 лет назад +1652

    "She asked if she could listen to what she called my 'tribal' music, and was consequently very disappointed when I produced my tape of Mariah Carey" LOL

  • @erickalena
    @erickalena 3 года назад +903

    Y'all, forget that this is homework. Here you have a brilliant author telling you the story of her life in your own home. Forget the questions you have to answer; you'll get to them later. Just sit down and listen to a wonderful lady tell you a story.

  • @atyangproscovia4238
    @atyangproscovia4238 2 года назад +23

    2022, am still here. She is so articulate. I could listen to her the whole year. Thank you for representing Africa Chimamanda.

  • @kemmonyeidahseitio6097
    @kemmonyeidahseitio6097 6 лет назад +720

    "The danger of a single story is that it robs people of their dignity."

    • @brebre2480
      @brebre2480 5 лет назад +15

      And their identity

    • @Dustshoe
      @Dustshoe 5 лет назад +3

      Kemmonye Idah Seitio - no, it galvanises others to tell their own stories. Perhaps credit is due to the original story-teller for that.

    • @lungiao229
      @lungiao229 5 лет назад

      I'm with you hommie👌

    • @ElijahShawmaliciousboy
      @ElijahShawmaliciousboy 5 лет назад +13

      @Someone from Israel That is not the truth at all. There were plenty of successful empires in Africa before europeans came, the oldest University Timbuktu was in Africa and were performing surgeries well before white people came. There are plenty of african countries thriving today, what you are spouting is worn out stereotypes and false narratives

    • @evaroa3311
      @evaroa3311 5 лет назад +10

      @Someone from Israel Where do you place Ethiopia with your assertions?! They were never colonized by the white man but have some of the best doctors, one of the first to fly planes across Atlantic, one of the first to have electric passenger trains etc. Check your facts mate!

  • @mslolab6343
    @mslolab6343 5 лет назад +323

    Her beautiful eyes 👀. Her heritage shines through her face, her soul. Proud ❤️

    • @Damian-hv6os
      @Damian-hv6os 4 года назад +5

      Uds have a Beautifull eyes

    • @garybesaw
      @garybesaw 4 года назад +6

      I have no idea what she said the entire time, although I did hear her beautiful voice. She is just a flat out beautiful, and gorgeous woman. And you can tell she is is as beautiful on the inside as she is on the outside.

    • @Jkingknox
      @Jkingknox 4 года назад +2

      Proud of what?

    • @jadebruce4091
      @jadebruce4091 4 года назад +1

      Jkingknox her country tf

    • @Jkingknox
      @Jkingknox 4 года назад

      @@jadebruce4091 just asking question and the i get cursed out man this world changing

  • @Fabiola-vv6kj
    @Fabiola-vv6kj 5 лет назад +322

    i remember watching this ted talk in my english class a couple of months ago and when she mentioned Guadalajara and her opinion about mexico i started crying because i was feeling really homesick and her words were beautiful but specially i felt her story. i’ve been in the US for almost a year and stereotypes are hurtful sometimes but it’s because they’re incomplete. i love so much this ted talk

    • @Radi8royal
      @Radi8royal 5 лет назад

      💞💞💞

    • @IlianaGuadalupe
      @IlianaGuadalupe 5 лет назад

      Animo, lucha, no te rindas. Pronto seremos mayoria y espero no repetir los errores que se vienen repitiendo con nuestra gente.

    • @livi4863
      @livi4863 4 года назад +5

      @Hutchinson Gellert This is a comment section, it is meant for people to speak up about their opinions. Dont read through them if you dislike different perspectives on a subject, you are really not blessing anyone with your presence.

  • @estebanlalosa900
    @estebanlalosa900 2 года назад +264

    She's really important for our society.

    • @richardrutto5709
      @richardrutto5709 Год назад +6

      We have to be careful about a single story, Many are victim towards the same but encourage a balance story, great, great motivation.

  • @squiggleworks9
    @squiggleworks9 8 лет назад +216

    I remember how taken aback I was when after I shared the fact that I was born and had spent the first part of my childhood in Guyana, South America, my college classmate asked if I used to live in a hut. I, who had likely lived a more privileged life than him, with a nanny, a maid, and a house as conventional as any, could not believe the leap he made. After sputtering for a while, I collected myself long enough to offer him some lame, probably incoherent, response. I don't know how much of an impression I made on him, but that brief exchange between us sure made an impression on me. I had a wonderful childhood, not least because of the privilege my parents afforded me, but also because of the setting in which it took place, and I often wished that instead of reacting with knee-jerk irritation, that I'd offered a better explanation that would have taught him the tiniest bit about my rich culture. He might've been 1 more person with a different perspective of the world outside America

    • @Holifeno
      @Holifeno 8 лет назад +26

      squiggleworks9 Had exactly the same experience. I am from Madagascar and now live in France. On my first day of prep school, in an all-white, all-French classroom, I was asked many questions like that as well. An American girl once told me "you speak like a white girl". French people are amazed by my flawless French. It was the first time in my life that I really understood what racism and racial prejudices meant.

    • @stephanieduncan9143
      @stephanieduncan9143 5 лет назад

      WOW whites in on a black Continent. How did y'all get there. OH yeah you're Colonizer Ancestors 🤔🤔👵👨👩👴👶✊🏾

  • @mariaivonneoropezahernande8449
    @mariaivonneoropezahernande8449 3 года назад +1044

    Thank you Chimamanda for your words. I am from Mexico, and as you say mexican people are more than narcos (drugs), corruption, crimes, violence, etc. I recognize the problems that we are facing but Mexican people are hard-working, gentle, and honest people who are proud of their traditions, food, culture, and sympathy with others.

    • @muhibiuthman7096
      @muhibiuthman7096 2 года назад +29

      Thank you Mexico for giving the world tacos and burritos

    • @Olokw
      @Olokw 2 года назад

      @figurante intankavel esse bostil

    • @ipekkutlu78
      @ipekkutlu78 2 года назад +19

      I love my Mexican sisters and brothers. Big warm hug from San Francisco

    • @dariosanchez7699
      @dariosanchez7699 2 года назад +2

      jajja pero también somos bien flojos y borrachos!! Y pues no hay que olvidar todos los conflictos qué tenemos con los indígenas de varios estados!

    • @whatyouwontseeontv8266
      @whatyouwontseeontv8266 2 года назад

      @@dariosanchez7699 Somos dijo el flojo borracho.

  • @AdemolaVictorTv
    @AdemolaVictorTv 6 лет назад +826

    From 2009 to now. Still a great speech. 💕

    • @jhoisyESL
      @jhoisyESL 5 лет назад

      Probably more relevant than ever considering the political climate in the US.

    • @tosinsoga7700
      @tosinsoga7700 5 лет назад

      AdemolaVictorTv I sense it's and old articles

  • @reaganbolt8500
    @reaganbolt8500 2 месяца назад +7

    Watched this in high school, back again for college. You never get away.

  • @TheYESShow
    @TheYESShow 9 лет назад +186

    There must be authentic stories told, for a single story is dangerous. When Chimamanda Adichie said: "Show a people as one thing, as only one thing, over and over again and that is what they become ", it literally spoke a powerful truth of solution and detriment. Great Ted Talk.

    • @chisommabia8940
      @chisommabia8940 5 лет назад

      Stories matter for positive exchange and brings to fore the danger of single story and building bridge to regain our paradise!

  • @jenniferanatulu6223
    @jenniferanatulu6223 5 лет назад +121

    I just love this woman!!!
    I can't believe I'm listening to this for the first time in 2019.
    There's this sense of pride i get when i hear Chimamanda speak. She makes me proud of my cultural heritage. Proud to be Nigerian, proud to be igbo just like her. It's amazing seeing a Nigerian igbo lady making a difference and it makes me think 'hey Jennie you can too'.

  • @rebeccatang9383
    @rebeccatang9383 6 лет назад +333

    I am the only thirteen year old in my school who loves TED talks. I have two big tests tomorrow and I am back, watching this talk to relieve stress. I can't even begin to explain how much I appreciate these talks from these wonderful people. I wish more kids my age loved these talks as much as i do.

    • @AquaMarino
      @AquaMarino 5 лет назад +12

      Great! Always be interested! You surely in the right path.

    • @joslynthompson8051
      @joslynthompson8051 5 лет назад +3

      Ted movie is the best stress relief before work and homework

    • @lorebay2593
      @lorebay2593 5 лет назад +12

      You my dear, have a mature mind and one day we will be hearing from you on TED talks telling your story.

    • @Wmwsandlian
      @Wmwsandlian 5 лет назад +2

      Rebecca Tang nerd

    • @gratitude5740
      @gratitude5740 5 лет назад +1

      Rebecca Tang , I’m 52 and this is how I get distracted from my studying, watch Ted talk videos. Who could have thought we would have something in common, lol.
      Good for you Rebecca! You are a smart young woman. All the best in your study 📖!

  • @briannalee1998
    @briannalee1998 Год назад +487

    This is why representation matters and why it's a good thing. I loved it when she said that she loved and appreciated the stories she grew up with, but there was still an unintended consequence where only reading about foreigners made her think (when she was a child) that people like her couldn't exist in stories. While people can love stories regardless of how much they have in common with the main character, there is something about reading a book or watching a movie with someone who has the same struggles as you that is so touching, that makes you feel seen and heard and understood on a level (and in an area of your life) that most people don't.
    For example, I've been a book worm and a film lover my whole life. I also have cerebral palsy, and while I don't expect or feel the need to have representation in every single book I read or movie I watch, I still love and deeply appreciate representation when it's done. A couple of months ago, I read A Curse So Dark and Lonely where the protagonist had cerebral palsy, and whenever she described how it felt for her to walk and move, I was blown away by how accurate it was and I was touched because I had never read a book where the experience of having CP was described before. There's a spectrum and it's different for everyone, but I could still relate to her and I loved reading it being described so well! I felt understood. As if someone truly knew what it was like. I loved having a character who I could relate to on that level, who had the same struggles and experiences that I had. I would've liked her character regardless since she was a badass, but it was really touching to read about someone who had those same experiences and who understood it.
    I'm a writer, and some of my characters have cerebral palsy because that's what I know and it's easy to write about. I also want to bring awareness to it, because the more people are aware of something, the less ignorance there will be about it. (And I got bullied a lot because of people being ignorant and not understanding my physical differences, and many people with CP get ostracized or dehumanized because of people's ignorance on CP.)
    However, not every character I create has CP or will have it, nor does every story have to have a character with CP in order for me to enjoy it. Still, the experience of someone with CP is a naturally easy thing for me to write about based on my life and I also want to spread awareness of it. Awareness is important. When people who are different are in stories (whether they have a disability or they are apart of a racial group that is not seen in stories or media a whole lot) they should be written as fully dimensional human beings because that's what they are. That's what we all are.

    • @zinaantoanetasabaudarling3344
      @zinaantoanetasabaudarling3344 Год назад +5

      ♥️

    • @MerchantsOfMisery
      @MerchantsOfMisery Год назад +16

      THANK YOU. I get so damn frustrated when I encounter while folks who can't be bothered to learn and understand why representation matters, so I appreciate comments like yours.

    • @nayakjimit9998
      @nayakjimit9998 Год назад

      exactly

    • @ileri-tu2dk
      @ileri-tu2dk Год назад +4

      You're very articulate.

    • @deanwallendorf5406
      @deanwallendorf5406 Год назад +5

      I usually never read comments, especially long ones. But as soon as I started reading your comment, I just wanted to continue reading about what you had to say. Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this video with everyone!

  • @АндрейКурочкин-з4ц
    @АндрейКурочкин-з4ц 2 года назад +489

    I'm from Russia. Ten years ago, when I first watched this talk, I found it important, meaningful, deep and wonderfully told. But I could never imagine that once in my country it would suddenly become so utterly relevant.
    The single story can kill. And can be told in order to make kill.

    • @JosymarThomas
      @JosymarThomas 2 года назад +26

      I understand That is what is happening with the people in your country, no one is telling other stories rather than war. It is so sad. It requires courage to do so.

    • @julietmoraa5106
      @julietmoraa5106 Год назад

      💔💔

  • @ozzyfromspace
    @ozzyfromspace 3 года назад +300

    I always come back to this talk every few months to a year, because Chimamanda has a beautiful mind ❤️🎊😊🙏🏽

  • @drakephilant407
    @drakephilant407 4 года назад +300

    its 2020 and am still here. She's incredible!

  • @anameans
    @anameans Год назад +20

    Oh, my God! Everything is so beautiful about Chimamanda: her story, her views, her looks, her moves, etc. She is the epitome of a beautiful human

  • @LucyBeefan6
    @LucyBeefan6 11 лет назад +160

    OMG, i am just blown away by her beauty and intelligence ...i love her!! :)

  • @Zeqqqq
    @Zeqqqq 4 года назад +112

    Unfortunately we ALL have a single story about a particular place or people/country. This is a great eye-opener or perhaps reminder that a single story doesn’t make up a place.

  • @manlikeinnocentortiz4914
    @manlikeinnocentortiz4914 3 года назад +195

    I'm watching this 11years later

    • @gracepepical310
      @gracepepical310 3 года назад +1

      Me too

    • @nayadabdallah9917
      @nayadabdallah9917 3 года назад +1

      Me too

    • @mojoman5884
      @mojoman5884 3 года назад +2

      Me too

    • @bobby37038
      @bobby37038 3 года назад +5

      This is timeless

    • @viniciuslima9430
      @viniciuslima9430 3 года назад +6

      Me too. But I am glad that I found this now because 11 years ago, I don’t think I would have understand how powerful her message is.

  • @samuelesierra
    @samuelesierra 2 года назад +66

    Como colombiano y latinoamericano en general, no tengo palabras para expresar las millones de formas en que ésta Ted Talk me cambió para siempre.

  • @missMagbeth
    @missMagbeth 3 года назад +1171

    As a Russian living in the US I feel how people expect me to live up to that one story they know of Russians. The dangers of one story are real. We all must keep expanding our minds!

    • @FRANCISCARUSOworld
      @FRANCISCARUSOworld 3 года назад +56

      As a Brazilian living in Europe I experience the same thing!

    • @nmg1909
      @nmg1909 3 года назад +44

      Most European and Americans never get off their minds that Africa has evolved with time.

    • @patrickadams1430
      @patrickadams1430 3 года назад +69

      ​@@nmg1909 Many of them don't get that Africa isn't a country.

    • @paulmarotto3911
      @paulmarotto3911 2 года назад +13

      The U.S.A. is large and diverse as well. I’m from the New England we are vastly different than Americans living in Florida.

    • @crioulom120
      @crioulom120 2 года назад +28

      As an African who lived in Russia I can say exactly the same thing you've just said and worse!

  • @AlbyNanaCady
    @AlbyNanaCady 6 лет назад +202

    As to why I feel emotional watching this, I guess I will understand ONE DAY. Until then, I must say this is one of the best speeches I've ever come across. I'm a proud Ghanaian.

    • @Lauren-br7ep
      @Lauren-br7ep 5 лет назад +6

      why are you proud to be from ghana? it is not something you did nor was it a choice. pride should be reserved for achievements. words have meaning, and you should really be careful about the things you think and say. i do not mean this as some sort of attack, just a hope that maybe you will reevaluate. have a good day mam.

    • @Cachalyce
      @Cachalyce 5 лет назад +28

      ​@@Lauren-br7ep Should she rather be ashamed beeing from ghana? Like americans and many other tell germans to be ashamed that they are germans because of history? Because thats the opposite - shame. Shame and pride are two sides of the same medal. Plus, beeing proud to be born somewhere can simply mean this: I'm happy to been born here and given the choice, I would still want to be born here. In your narrative, no american is allowed to be proud of beeing an american - because that is no achievement. Even if they migrated to america.
      However, pride and shame are emotions we also feel in context to morals, opinions and other people - not only because of achievements.

    • @euniceadjapong233
      @euniceadjapong233 5 лет назад +5

      Elisa J what are you talking about I’m a proud Ghanaian too.

    • @jayliketheletter4941
      @jayliketheletter4941 4 года назад +1

      Somheil you took the words right out of my mouth.
      Plus sometimes places help mold and raise a person with a specific mentality. Speaking from experience, look at the people of Puerto Rico now? When Hurricane Maria hit, who took control of helping the people once the government failed to do so properly or efficiently? Puerto Rican’s. When these earthquakes started hitting our southern coast, who got in their cars to drive down south and help deliver essentials? The people.
      Sometimes pride for a specific place comes from the people and the culture itself. The mentality that place and culture helps nurture.
      Be proud of being Ghanaian. It’s a beautiful thing to have pride in something people can’t take away from you.

  • @MCBPZ
    @MCBPZ 8 лет назад +871

    Most civil comments ever seen on a youtube video

    • @candicekeene2133
      @candicekeene2133 7 лет назад +28

      Hahaha. I felt the same way scrolling and reading. You know how you begin to read and like...let the drama begin! ding ding! These comments ive me hope in us!

    • @candicekeene2133
      @candicekeene2133 7 лет назад +3

      *give

    • @Correctgistlover
      @Correctgistlover 7 лет назад +5

      I'm so freaking happy finally civil people on the internet you!

    • @andie_Jones
      @andie_Jones 6 лет назад

      MCBPZ I agree with you. The comments are amazing.

    • @abolishice591
      @abolishice591 6 лет назад +7

      Every one of Adichie's talks seems to be a breeding ground for understanding and tolerance and I don't think it's hard to see why

  • @viviannenge8361
    @viviannenge8361 Год назад +45

    I love it that even though she's lived in the west for most of her life and yet she never loses her African accent. That's AFRICAN AUTHENTICITY 💯💯💯

    • @bellahadidnt.
      @bellahadidnt. Год назад +1

      i love that sm

    • @thecluckster3908
      @thecluckster3908 Год назад +8

      I mean she went to America when she was in college so I’d say it would be hard to lose an accent by then

    • @nolitetebastardescarborund9761
      @nolitetebastardescarborund9761 Год назад

      Why try to lose your accent in your native language? Some gormless Brit once gasped in amazement that I, a US expatriate in France, hadn't lost my American accent! What was I supposed to do, take on a French accent in English? Or take on a British accent in France? I only try to lose my Anglo accent in French!@@thecluckster3908

    • @mrlij6534
      @mrlij6534 Год назад +1

      lol. i know, im sure u are familiar with some fellow Nigerians that go on vacation for 2 weeks and come back with a new accent, im like cut the bs and talk normally please. lol

    • @minerva_appiah
      @minerva_appiah 6 дней назад

      African accent? Or Nigerian accent? There's no such thing as an African accent. Various people from different African countries have different accents based on their country, the accent from Nigeria is different from the accent in Ghana. And even within countries there are various accents depending on the tribe you're from and the part of the country you've lived or grown up in.
      So there's no such thing as an African accent.
      But nonetheless yes, she does have a beautiful accent. Is it an African accent? No. But it's a beautiful accent all the same.

  • @paulhuang2773
    @paulhuang2773 4 года назад +2719

    Online school gang 2020.

  • @dimatadore
    @dimatadore 5 лет назад +126

    Yes! I'm from the Middle East and I know what Americans around me think when they know where I'm from. Suddenly their entire perception of who I am changes. Suddenly they feel the need to talk about how they want peace and they feel pressured to ask the same questions. War and land isn't our only story! Brilliant.

    • @Dustshoe
      @Dustshoe 5 лет назад +2

      The Matadore So you've lumped all Americans into a box, yourself?

    • @princessbuttercup8954
      @princessbuttercup8954 5 лет назад +5

      @@Dustshoe you just proved her point dumbass!

    • @game_boyd1644
      @game_boyd1644 5 лет назад +12

      @@Dustshoe What do you mean? He/She specifically said Americans AROUND ME

    • @andreamiller3478
      @andreamiller3478 4 года назад

      What would be some good questions for people to ask you when they find our where you are from?

    • @fmjjjjn7510
      @fmjjjjn7510 4 года назад

      Yesssss as an african person I also agree

  • @lotorobagi210
    @lotorobagi210 9 лет назад +46

    Ngozi, amen. I am a proud South Sudanese from a remarkably privileged upbringing. I was educated in the best and most expensive schools in Sudan, before the separation of the country. However, my privileged childhood made me the product and believer of the single narrative about my countrymen and the whole African continent. Thank you for shaking some my deepest held believes. May we seek that that has not been told about our people. Rock on Ngozi.

  • @4everexotics
    @4everexotics 7 месяцев назад +411

    anyone on here in 2024?

  • @noahofftopik7236
    @noahofftopik7236 3 года назад +155

    Chimamanda is so well educated and speaks genuinely about her experiences and those of others. the single story is so common these days, and if you read the comment section you can see how everyone is one track minded. Let's switch from our stereotypical mindsets and gain our dignity back. Thank you for the great video, it was enlightening and very powerful.

  • @electronkaleidoscope5860
    @electronkaleidoscope5860 7 лет назад +70

    This is twenty minutes of pure wisdom and kindness.
    Incredible

  • @TheEstame
    @TheEstame 10 лет назад +98

    I am fully behind that one man who stood up to clap at the end.

    • @brendahmisiani8576
      @brendahmisiani8576 Месяц назад +1

      I thought I'm the only one who recognized him, wow!

  • @carameltessy4639
    @carameltessy4639 Год назад +13

    13years later And this woman keeps going strong 💪..give her flowers 💐 She deserve it

  • @brunokongawi2993
    @brunokongawi2993 10 лет назад +133

    When I moved to the U.S. to pursue a university degree I was really surprised to see how little people knew about Africans. I couldn't believe how oblivious Americans were to the rest of the world. Even more surprising was the fact that I knew more about the United States than Americans themselves (The economy, the history, the geography and the political structure of most countries are taught in Congolese schools). Furthermore, I couldn't comprehend the intellectual lethargy and the motivational deficiency in a lot of Americans even though they have such a wealth of information at the tips of their fingers. In Congo, I didn't have access to the Internet and books were rare and expensive. I ,nonetheless, was able to teach myself English with the little resources I had. I had an old dictionary with some pages missing that I would use to decipher any English texts I could find. I even studied some rap lyrics a friend who had the Internet printed. Any material was very valuable to my eyes. when I arrived I was overwhelmed by the amount of knowledge I could now access with Google. At the university, I realized that I already knew most of the calculus being taught. I had learned biology, chemistry and even physics (my favorite topic) in my high school. I rarely took notes because I didn't see the point since I could find all of the information I needed online or in books. The school wouldn't let me test out of these classes and even put me in a reading class while I was earning money by ghost writing papers for some American students who spoke English their whole life (English is my fourth language). And that's how I paid for most of my books. I could have easily graduated two years earlier. I used to sometimes get mad at the dumb questions I was asked. But now I realized that it's not their fault since it's what most of them see in the media. So when an arrogant person makes condescending remarks or jokes I do not resent them. I take them with humility, knowing that I have accomplished at lot despite the obstacles. I graduated with a degree in both mathematics and computer science. I am now a software engineer.

    • @elvicatilimoya7117
      @elvicatilimoya7117 4 года назад +1

      Wow that's amazing !

    • @Usthereout
      @Usthereout 4 года назад +2

      Yeah. When my mom moved here, she found college fun and easy because there was so much resources to use, so she would also make money by doing essays for college students

  • @BigShady2
    @BigShady2 3 года назад +1094

    SO many people talking about how we have the same assignment, geez just drop the answers then 😒😂

    • @devina8812
      @devina8812 3 года назад +19

      It’s 20 minutes long bruv

    • @BigShady2
      @BigShady2 3 года назад +66

      @@devina8812 ik, I watched it and was actually intrigued by the video

    • @prodKash-tq3dg
      @prodKash-tq3dg 3 года назад +5

      ong

    • @gracewalker5283
      @gracewalker5283 3 года назад +8

      FR

    • @jessicayoung3656
      @jessicayoung3656 3 года назад +24

      I have to write a 4 page paper on this subject, so don't think I can drop answers.

  • @kelseycoca
    @kelseycoca 5 лет назад +172

    9:29 “Show a people as one thing, as only one thing, over and over again, and that is what they become.”
    13:11 “The single story creates stereotypes. And the problem with stereotypes is not that are untrue- but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story.”
    13:54 “The consequence of the single story is this: it robs people of dignity. It makes our recognition of an equal humanity difficult. It emphasizes that we are different, rather than how we are similar.”
    17:33 “... For all of the people who are eager to tell our many stories. Stories matter. Many stories matter. Stories have been used to dispossess and malalign, but stories can also be used to empower and to humanize. Stories can break the dignity of a people-but they can also repair that broken dignity”
    18:20 "When we reject a single story, when we realize that there's never a single story about any place, we regain a kind of paradise."

    • @cliftonedwards9697
      @cliftonedwards9697 4 года назад +5

      Kelsey CoCa a lifesaver

    • @kelseycoca
      @kelseycoca 4 года назад +1

      @@cliftonedwards9697 good luck with the class!

    • @amey9719
      @amey9719 4 года назад

      @Kelsey CoCa Thank You Very Much! 😊😊

    • @mackenzieburgess4092
      @mackenzieburgess4092 4 года назад

      @@cliftonedwards9697 she really is!!!!

  • @kayonsalvadon5323
    @kayonsalvadon5323 2 года назад +40

    I'm an African/Nigerian too. This went deep and showed how a single story can do so much with words. Like most people say words have power and this is one of the best examples I've seen in a long time. I hope you pass this on to generations to the next.

  • @jaylunspencer3151
    @jaylunspencer3151 4 года назад +191

    “Many stories matter. Stories have been used to dispossess and to malign. But stories can also be used to empower and to humanize. Stories can break the dignity of a people. But stories can also repair that broken dignity.” (Adichie 17:38 )
    "that is how you create a single story, show a people as one thing. As only one thing, over and over again and that is what they become" (Adichie 9:27 )
    "Power is the ability to not just to tell the story of another person, but to make it the definitive story of that person" (Adichie 10:13 )
    "The single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story" Adichie 13:12 )
    "The consequence of the single story is this: it robs people of dignity. It makes our recognition four equal humanity difficult, it emphasizes how we are different rather than how we are similar" (Adichie 13:55 )
    "When we reject the single story. when we realize that there is never a single story of any place, we regain a kind of paradise" (Adichie 18:22 )

    • @offperkz2454
      @offperkz2454 4 года назад +4

      Got a 100%😎 I’m smart... well... u are😂😂

    • @blazing_edits117
      @blazing_edits117 4 года назад +4

      tysm im using this as notes :)

    • @gummy7218
      @gummy7218 4 года назад +1

      THANK YOU BLESS YOUR SOUL

    • @codeecho9404
      @codeecho9404 3 года назад +1

      Thank you so much for the time stamps

    • @muicharles3512
      @muicharles3512 3 года назад +1

      thank you so much

  • @GuapoG0tGuap
    @GuapoG0tGuap 3 года назад +1726

    POV: you just read the same joke 20 times in the comments

    • @aliediskasoglu7998
      @aliediskasoglu7998 3 года назад +9

      That is eeexactly what happened bro!

    • @tommasocarrieri1975
      @tommasocarrieri1975 3 года назад +4

      and I still laugh at it

    • @trilingualfudge7307
      @trilingualfudge7307 3 года назад +7

      Yes help I was just finding out more about this author and everyone is talking about how this is for their English studies

    • @-Unidentified_Comment-
      @-Unidentified_Comment- 3 года назад

      You’re desperate for likes aren’t you

    • @trilingualfudge7307
      @trilingualfudge7307 3 года назад +9

      @@-Unidentified_Comment- oh wow, people need validation on the internet because the world outside them is crumbling around them. What. A. Comback
      /s

  • @XhanAnimations
    @XhanAnimations 3 года назад +239

    Her small joke additions are done so nicely

    • @meno1ms
      @meno1ms 2 года назад +2

      Yes she does it so eloquent.. I love it

  • @marianstewartanthony5784
    @marianstewartanthony5784 Год назад +13

    I have watched this TED Talk by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie so many times, and it is still fresh, relevant, and profound to me! Thank you Chimamanda!

  • @chirstabelfrancisnweke9202
    @chirstabelfrancisnweke9202 9 лет назад +126

    After watching this i am definitely, so much more proud that I am Nigerian and Igbo.

    • @ganeatidavidelondoman9561
      @ganeatidavidelondoman9561 8 лет назад +4

      so you were not

    • @FeminineShinobi
      @FeminineShinobi 8 лет назад +12

      +Ganeati David Elo ndoman She said she's "much more" proud, which means she was proud before but is even PROUDER now.

    • @sorochicharles4560
      @sorochicharles4560 7 лет назад +1

      Same here. I was feeling like a boss when the video was played for us in a Caribbean university

    • @bigshotmovieverse2621
      @bigshotmovieverse2621 6 лет назад +2

      I loved the way she pronounced "Fide". Roots speaking. lol.

    • @tombucci3015
      @tombucci3015 6 лет назад

      Just like me

  • @gurpreetsingh-gz6yf
    @gurpreetsingh-gz6yf 8 лет назад +75

    that's a speech... very well expressed, calmly and without any pretension. such writers must be supported promoted and respected.

  • @LivAlexa32
    @LivAlexa32 9 лет назад +794

    A beautiful and intelligent woman! I am moved by this and my eyes have been opened, brb while I go read all of her books

    • @uzi_uzii
      @uzi_uzii 9 лет назад +11

      All of her books are amazing

    • @guystokesable
      @guystokesable 9 лет назад

      +Uzoamaka Orji what would you recommend?

    • @uzi_uzii
      @uzi_uzii 9 лет назад +11

      +Guy Stokes "Half of a Yellow Sun" was the first book I read of hers and I thought to myself; I'll never read another novel as inspiring and as insightful as this one, but then I picked up "Americanah"... And then again "Purple Hibiscus". Lol. But I think Americanah is my favorite

    • @blackwallflower
      @blackwallflower 9 лет назад

      +Uzoamaka Orji I agree amerianah is also my favorite book of her

    • @Stallion_of_italians1
      @Stallion_of_italians1 8 лет назад

      +Uzoamaka Orji can u summarize this video?

  • @noodlespence8080
    @noodlespence8080 2 года назад +72

    I'm a junior in high school and was assigned this video. I'm glad they're teaching us the truth younger and younger.

    • @emimimimimimimi
      @emimimimimimimi Год назад +2

      I believe when i first saw it, it was from my Lit teacher in 8th grade. Still impacts me a lot all these years later

    • @thugwaffle6759
      @thugwaffle6759 Год назад +1

      Watched it in high school and now they're having me watch it again in college.. 😂 love it though

  • @mizzishtar456
    @mizzishtar456 8 лет назад +86

    I could listen to this woman talk for hours. I love her voice and her accent and her ideas. I feel like she would have some wonderful tales to tell if you could sit down with her for an evening.