Western professor gets novel idea
Thom Koschwanez
Issue date: 2/4/05 Section: News
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If life experiences can be translated into novels, then Kenneth Hawkinson, professor and chair of Western Illinois University's communication department, has many waiting to be written.
Hawkinson has recently published "The Oil in the Lamp," released by Publish America in November 2004. The novel follows a young man through his discovery of self-awareness and understanding, using countless proverbs and metaphors.
Through his travels in the Peace Corps and while teaching on a Fulbright Scholarship, Hawkinson studied the effects of Western society on the cultures and oral traditions of West Africa.
"In Africa, storytelling is still very much a part of the makeup of their worldview," Hawkinson said. "These stories represent values of what's right and wrong, how people are supposed to exist in their society, and how they are supposed to relate to each other. And it is through the stories that people understand who they are, and how they are to exist in that society."
Hawkinson finds that Americans have lost the ideas behind storytelling.
"In our culture, stories are not really seen that way, people find out who they are, or how they are supposed to exist in their society by people telling them. They are not using metaphor. They're not using symbols to explain these things, so there is a disconnect between the world of the story, the world of the myth and people's everyday lives and how they view themselves."
In African nations, storytelling differs greatly, he said.
"In Africa there is not a disconnection, stories and myths and the way people live their lives are totally aligned and connected, and there's great beauty in seeing the world through myth and through story," Hawkinson said.
After earning his bachelor's degree in history and his master's in speech communication from Western, he found himself repaying his education by serving as an officer in the Army, stationed in Germany.
While in the Army he debated whether to pursue his doctorate or follow a dream and join the Peace Corps.
Hawkinson has recently published "The Oil in the Lamp," released by Publish America in November 2004. The novel follows a young man through his discovery of self-awareness and understanding, using countless proverbs and metaphors.
Through his travels in the Peace Corps and while teaching on a Fulbright Scholarship, Hawkinson studied the effects of Western society on the cultures and oral traditions of West Africa.
"In Africa, storytelling is still very much a part of the makeup of their worldview," Hawkinson said. "These stories represent values of what's right and wrong, how people are supposed to exist in their society, and how they are supposed to relate to each other. And it is through the stories that people understand who they are, and how they are to exist in that society."
Hawkinson finds that Americans have lost the ideas behind storytelling.
"In our culture, stories are not really seen that way, people find out who they are, or how they are supposed to exist in their society by people telling them. They are not using metaphor. They're not using symbols to explain these things, so there is a disconnect between the world of the story, the world of the myth and people's everyday lives and how they view themselves."
In African nations, storytelling differs greatly, he said.
"In Africa there is not a disconnection, stories and myths and the way people live their lives are totally aligned and connected, and there's great beauty in seeing the world through myth and through story," Hawkinson said.
After earning his bachelor's degree in history and his master's in speech communication from Western, he found himself repaying his education by serving as an officer in the Army, stationed in Germany.
While in the Army he debated whether to pursue his doctorate or follow a dream and join the Peace Corps.

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