Opinion
Book Piracy And Academic Excellence
The provision of quality education in Nigeria has remained illusory for many years. This is a fact that is incontrovertible to academically well-disposed Nigerians. In the light of this unarguable premise and problem, many Nigerians have proffered some pragmatic solutions to salvage the nation’s education from its present academic doldrums.
These solutions range from the equipment of the institutions, staffing them with skilled manpower, to the introduction of moral education and discipline. These and other measures will respond to the present needs of our nation’s education and will give it a face-lift.
In addition to the above measures, many people are of the opinion that budgetary allocation to education is inadequate and should be increased. However, one serious problem that has eluded the minds of many Nigerians is “book piracy.’’ There are few people, if any, I hold in awe, who have ever considered piracy a destroyer of effective and quality education. Only few in the field of academia will quickly describe “book piracy” as evil and harmful to effective teaching and learning.
Book piracy -which is the use and reproduction of another person’s book, just for one’s own profit, has been detrimental to learning in schools, and therefore, must be checked.
Many people can dismiss this idea with a wave of the hands as they may consider it a contemporary peccadillo. But, the banal truth is that book piracy is inimical to academic excellence.
There are many fields of study in our institutions. In literature as a field of study, the negative effect of book piracy is more serious. This negative effect pervades mainly two out of the three genres of literature, namely, the novel and the play. Pirated books offer nothing good to a learner, but deception. The books are ineffective and useless to a country in pursuit of an ideal and quality education.
For instance, the novel is an extended fictional prose narrative, customarily restrict to narratives in which the representation of character occurs either in a static condition, or in the process of development as the result of events or actions. Generally, however, the novel is a book with lengthy stories that deal with either imaginary, or historical characters.
Besides characterization, the novel, like any other genre, has a theme and a plot. Simply put, the theme is the main idea for which the novel exists. The plot is the sequential arrangement of the event, or actions in the novel in a cause and effect relationship. By implication, the plot culminates in the theme of the novel.
Creative or literary artists structure their plots sequentially and logically for a purpose, and therefore, expect the audience (the readers) to understand the plots in the same light. While drama is written in “ acts and scenes,” the novel is written in “chapters and paragraphs”, hence, it can be said that literary artists observe fictive orderliness to ensure clarity and a sense of direction.
In contrast, book piracy does not recognize all these. Those in the bad business, either disarrange the pages of the novel, skip some of the pages, or get some of the pages truncated, thereby, distorting the fictive sequence or plot and consequently, marring the fictive beauty and hindering logical comprehension of the text.
Worst of all, the books are sometimes pirated with laxity such that the words in them are different from the words in the original copies. Also, the books do not last. Their ephemeral nature is interpretative of their binding and the inferior materials used for their production. In view of all these, fighting to entrench quality education in the face of high- level piracy will engender serious ambivalence; hence, pirated books are exponentially bad for quality education.
It should be said that most of the books pirated are foreign books-such as: The Old Man And The Sea, The Tempest, among others. I must hasten to assert at this juncture, that I am not writing from the mind of a cynic, but from the sensibility and knowledge of a dedicated, sedulous and experienced education officer, scholar, teacher and tutor. I am writing from observation and facts.
It should be stated explicitly that book piracy is part of the hallmarks of a corrupt society, where personal interest overrides commitment to the values of the state. Hence, the resultant effect becomes a society without a bearing.
Many people go for these pirated books because they cannot afford the scarce, original, but expensive copies. Nigeria is a rich nation with abundant human and material resources. Yet, many Nigerians are poor below poverty level, while some are stinkingly rich, because, self-enrichment out of public fund is the order of the day.
Nigeria has enough economic potentials and dependable luminaries that can effect a change. But these luminaries cannot do this, as the honest and dedicated ones are outside the corridors of power. Thus, viewed strictly within the context of its potentials and the bastardy it has been invested with, our nation is unarguably in a sorry state. And book piracy is one of the fundamental reasons for the decay in the education sector, which has ultimately impacted negatively on the search for education excellence.
Egbunefu resides in Egwi, Etche, Rivers State.
Egbunefu Livinus
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