Imbolo Mbue: Reading from “Behold the Dreamers”


In the middle of the pandemic, it might be uplifting to be reminded that there have been times of crisis before that we have confronted and lived through. Meet author Imbolo Mbue who in her acclaimed novel “Behold the dreamers” takes us back to the financial breakdown in 2008.
Imbolo Mbue came to America before 9/11 and the economic recession, a time she describes as “much simpler.” As an African immigrant, an Ivy League graduate and a young professional she has experienced the realities of both poverty and success in New York City. Losing her job during the financial crisis allowed Mbue to write ‘Behold the Dreamers’, a tale of dreams and loss in modern America seen from the point of view of an immigrant family and an Upper East Side executive. The experience of being let go, explains Mbue in this interview, awakened her curiosity to the myriad of different ways in which the crisis affected the inhabitants of New York. Fascinated by the difference between the social groups of the city, she compared her own working-class immigrant life with that of a privileged New Yorker and wondered: “what is it like? What are his struggles? And his socialite wife, what are her struggles?”
Mbue’s debut is controversially empathetic with the so-called “Fat Cats,” the bankers and Wall Street executives, often blamed for the financial crash and the inequality in America. The novel looks at the crisis from the side of the privileged: “Even the Wall St. exec – this man still has his own virtues, he has things about him you can admire … Just like the African immigrant family.” In the end, says Mbue “behind the money, the race, the class, they’re just human beings. Many of us are going after the same thing in different ways.”
Imbolo Mbue (b. 1982) is a Cameroonian-American author based in New York City. She holds a B.S. from Rutgers University and an M.A. from Columbia University. Her debut novel ‘Behold the Dreamers’ was released to great reviews in 2016. The reading was recorded at the Louisiana Literature Festival in 2017 hosted by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (Denmark).
Camera: Klaus Elmer

Edited by Klaus Elmer

Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner

Copyright: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2021

Supported by NORDEA Fonden.

FOLLOW US HERE!
Website: http://channel.louisiana.dk
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LouisianaChannel
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/louisianachannel
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/LouisianaChann

source