The Empire Writes Back

The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures is a 1989 non-fiction book on postcolonialism, penned by Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin.[1] The Empire Writes Back was the first major theoretical account of a wide range of postcolonial texts and their relationship with bigger issues of postcolonial culture, and is said to be one of the most significant and important works published in the field of postcolonialism. The writers debate on the relationships within postcolonial works, study the mighty forces acting on words in the postcolonial text, and prove how these texts constitute a radical critique of Eurocentric notions of language and literature. First released in 1989, this book had a second edition published in 2002.[2]

The Empire Writes Back : Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures
AuthorBill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin
LanguageEnglish
SeriesNew Accents Ser.
SubjectsCommonwealth literature (English) -- History and criticism.

English literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism. Postcolonialism -- English-speaking countries. Postcolonialism -- Commonwealth countries. Postcolonialism in literature.

Colonies in literature.
Published1989
PublisherTaylor & Francis Group
Publication placeAmerica
Pages296
ISBN978-0-415-28019-8

The title refers to Salman Rushdie's 1982 article "The Empire Writes Back with a Vengeance". In addition to being a pun on the film Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, the phrase refers to the ways postcolonial voices respond to the literary canon of the colonial centre.[3]

Background

edit
 
Map of Decolonized Countries. Special Committee on Decolonization. United Nations.

The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures aims to give a theoretical account of an extensive range of post-colonial texts and how these texts relate to a greater number of issues relating to post-colonial culture. The term "post-colonial"[4] in this book covers all the cultures of nations that have been affected by imperial policies that extend the rule and power of an empire or nation over foreign countries, or of acquiring and holding colonies and dependencies. Colonialism places the imperial interests over the interests of the dependent states. A process of decolonization has been attempted around colonised states to combat the negative effects of colonisation on national and personal identity. The theoretical process of decolonisation is a major subject that the authors examine.

Post-colonial literature examines countries: African countries, Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, Caribbean countries, India, Malaysia, Malta, New Zealand, Pakistan, Singapore, South Pacific Island countries and Sri Lanka that are widely discussed in this book. The literature of these countries is based on how European nations have dominated and controlled 'Third World' culture and how these countries have reacted to and have resisted those encroachments. They follow the development of post-colonial studies from the imperial period when the colonised lands are more or less "fictionally" represented in travel accounts, documents and diaries, fictional, photographic and cinematic appropriation, to the natives' literature written under the "imperial licence"[5] and finally to the so-called "post-colonial" writing. The Empire Writes Back considers the intertextually of postcolonial works and authorship by virtue of its references to a cultural, hegemonic discourse which it undermines and subverts, its sometimes parodic interpretation of the imperial discourse, and its ludic preferences regarding narrative techniques and linguistic nuances.

The authors of this book have explained that the task of the book is two-fold. The first task is to find the range and the exact nature of post-colonial scholarship, and the second task is to describe and account for the different theories which have emerged so far.

Overview of Post-Colonial Studies

edit
 
Four international organizations whose membership largely follows the pattern of previous colonial empires.

Post-colonialist literature is an academic study investigating the interplay between two discourses: colonialism (1871) and post-colonialism (1980). During the mid-20th century, a process of decolonisation occurred whereby nations attempted to undo the effects of colonialism, granting its citizens the right to 'self-determination'. As a result, postcolonial studies started to reflect the decolonisation of nations in theory, referred to as 'intellectual decolonisation'.[6] Postcolonial literature became centrally about strategically subverting colonisers' hegemony over the colonised by dismantling Eurocentric discourses.[7]

In academia, literary theory has been the traditional home of postcolonial analysis such as the work of Gayatri Spivak on 'the subaltern',[8] Edward Said on 'orientalism',[9] Homi K. Bhabha on 'hybridity',[10] Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o on 'language'.[11] These notable theorists are referred to throughout postcolonial literature and specifically in The Empire Writes Back when discussing colonial politics. Their investigative work seeks to offer redefinitions of representations of otherness, ex/centric, centre/periphery, decentralization, national identity and deconstructing the semantics of language and vocabularies that underpin Eurocentric epistemological privilege.[12] The Empire Writes Back is a theoretical account exploring the nexus between these literary scholars and their relation to the larger issues of postcolonial culture.

Chapter Summary

edit

Chapter 1: Cutting the ground: critical models of post-colonial literatures

edit
 
The Empire Writes Back Book Cover, 2nd Edition, New Accents.

In Chapter 1, the authors look at the development of descriptive models of post-colonial writing by examining the different ways in which they appropriate and arrange the material used in "linguistic" culture.[1] To this end, they have four major models.

First Model

edit

The first model is the national or regional model related to distinctive national or regional culture, literature and language surrounding different communities. The emergence of a distinctive American literature in the late eighteenth century made the US a post-colonial nation to link literature with nationality.[1] The experience of developing this 'national literature' in the attempt to create a new type of literature can be seen as the model for all later post-colonial writings. This illustrated that some of a post-colonial nation's strongest linguistic and cultural traits depend on its relationship with the colonising power which developed different characteristics from that of Britain.[13]

Tied closely to the distinctive national or regional culture is the comparison between two or more regions that have diverse ideas. The comparisons between countries of the white diaspora;[14] comparisons between areas of Black diaspora[15][16] and comparisons across black and white communities[17] allow for an understanding of the assimilation to predominantly British world-view that occurred due to colonisation. By establishing the inter-relationship between the two cultures, the authors posit that black and white colonies are not able to escape from 'metropolitan-colonial axis'.

Second Model

edit

The second model is the 'race-based' model which proposes that race is a feature of economic and political discrimination and draws writers together of different diaspora. It is this sharing of characteristics that allow writers of African diaspora; African Americans, Afro-Caribbeans and other nationalities to write on the African nation. This is further addressed in the "Black writing" model.[18][19]

Third Model

edit

The third model is the comparative model which tries to account for linguistic, historical and cultural characteristics across the literature of two or more post-colonial countries. Some post-colonial critics have found thematic parallels between different literatures written in English such as the theme of celebration of the struggle towards independence in community and the individual.[20] Other critics have also found that post-colonial literature is not limited to thematic parallel but also stylistic techniques such as the use of allegory,[21] irony[22] and magic realism[23] which also characterise post-colonial writing.

Fourth Model

edit

The fourth model is the comparative model which looks at features such as cultural hybridity, drawing upon the works of Homi K. Bhabha, and syncretistic (the blending of cultures and ideas) as the necessary components for all post-colonial literatures.[1] The authors state that both literary theorists and cultural historians are now recognising that syncreticity[24] is potentially the destination point to the previous pursuit of one nation's conquest to dominate another nation - culturally, politically and in post-colonial literatures.

Chapter 2: Re-placing language: textual strategies in post-colonial writing

edit

In Chapter 2, the authors cover the process where language is used as a discursive practice to understand the self and make sense of one's culture. Language is a textual strategy in post-colonial writing. In this chapter, the authors cover the topic of 'Re-Placing Language'[1] using different strategies in post-colonial writings: 'abrogation and appropriation'. Abrogation is the rejection by post-colonial writers of a normative concept of "correct" English and the concepts of inferior "dialects" as well as the reworking of well-known texts to change their meaning. Abrogation allows for poly-dialectical cultures to exist. Appropriation[25] is the term used by the authors to describe the reconstitution of language of the centre and to remould language to its new usage. Further, appropriation is a process to "convey in a language that is not one's own the spirit that is one's own." (Raja Rao 1938) The authors explain that all post-colonial literature is cross-cultural as it attempts to negotiate the gap between then through the processes of abrogation and appropriation.

Drawing upon a dominant example of poly-dialectical culture is the working of the Creole Continuum with its specific application to the Caribbean.[26] This theory offers a clear picture of how fast abrogating moving in the post-colonial literature. The metonymic function of language variance also abrogates the "correct" English by using a language that chooses to show a difference in order to for the colonised people to convey a sense of power and reclaiming their identities whilst using a sameness to allow the language to be understood.

Glossing[27] and untranslated words, is used to convey a sense of cultural distinctiveness.[28] The fusion of linguistic structures of two languages[29] are further textual strategies used in post-colonial writing to replace language. All strategies discussed in this chapter enable the writers to produce texts that are culturally distinct and different although they are written in "English." In this manner the authors feel that the post-colonial writers have contributed greatly to the "reformation" of English literature.

Chapter 3: Re-placing the text: the liberation of post-colonial writing

edit

Chapter 3 covers the "re-placing the text" which gives rise to the liberation of post-colonial writing. The authors establish how post-colonial writing combines with both the social and "material" practices of colonialism through the "symptomatic" readings of a number of texts. That is, how culture shapes and determines a reader's understanding of the text. Appropriation is stated as the one strategy that has had the most influence on post-colonial writing.[1] By the author's readings of various post-colonial scholarship and novels they have attempted to identify the various "theoretical shifts in the development of post-colonial writing."

Under the heading "Colonialism and Silence" Lewis Nkosi's novel Mating Birds (1986) is provided as an example whereby silence is led by the cultural conditions in South Africa and the manner in which the state controls the means of communication. The "silence" experienced in South Africa is evident in their newspapers, journals and much of their literature writings. This silence precedes the process of appropriation. 

Authenticity and the position that only particular types of experience can be regarded as "true" literature is covered through the examination of V.S. Naipaul's, a post-colonial writer from Trinidad, The Mimic Men (1967). Naipaul expresses in this literary work his view that the imitating of colonised societies of their culture and language to that of the "colonisers" can be disabling and that soon "truth", "reality" and "order" become illusions.

Further in Chapter 3 the authors cover the topic of abrogating "authenticity" through the study of a short story by Michael Anthony[30] Sandra Street.  This entire piece of work is about the abrogation of those experiences which have been regarded as "authentic". The authors challenge the process by which 'authenticity' of culture is granted by the centre, coloniser, oppressor, instead arguing for a repatriation of culture through abrogation.

The liberation of post-colonial writing is further examined through Timothy Findley (1984) in his book Not Wanted on the Voyage. In this text Findley has extended the method of "writing back" by rewriting the story of Noah and the flood by changing the story, not to one of redemption but to one of marginalisation and destruction. Further symptomatic readings in this Chapter include Janet Frame's (Frame 1962) The Edge of the Alphabet and R.K. Narayan's (1967) The Vendor of Sweets both of which assist the authors in identifying the symptomatic and distinctive features of their analysis of post-colonial writings.

Chapter 4: Theory at the crossroads: indigenous theory and post-colonial reading

edit

Chapter 4 discusses indigenous theory and post-colonial reading which the authors cover under the heading of 'Theory at the Crossroads'.[1] They acknowledge that all post-colonial countries still have "native" cultures that are widespread and range across the different and varied cultures. The authors are of the opinion that "received" English has always been a real problem for writers and that the preferred language is synonymous with indigenous attitudes when it comes to the actual role of literature in any society.

They state that a number of writers feel that the indigenous languages have been changed and hybridised[10] due to the presence of the attempt to debunk ideas that have become entrenched as a result of colonialism. This can be attributed to the age of not only a rapid language change but also is due to the enormous influence media has today on ordinary speech and cultural habits. This has made it difficult for some writers when they are attempting to revisit appropriation.

An example is given referencing R. Parthasarthy (1977:44), a poet who decided to return to writing in his native Tamil after years of writing in English.  Contemporary criticism of Indian writing in English in this Chapter states that writing in English only accounts for a small part of contemporary Indian writing. It is stated that the work produced by contemporary writers using their indigenous languages was far superior in quality and quantity to the work produced in English.

Negritude and "Black Literature" was further covered in this chapter as an extension from Chapter 1's 'Black Writing Model'.[1] The white cultures of the settler colonies of the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand have accumulated a huge number of literary studies and individual literary traditions. This has meant that coloniser literature has often dominated the English Literary Canon and diminishing colonised voices as inferior or intellectually incompatible.

A number of questions that have been raised in relation to these settler colonies, who are at the crossroads, focus on the tensions that are present in all post-colonial literatures. Namely, the connection that exists between social and literary practices in both the old world and the new world, the relationship that exists between the indigenous peoples in "settled" areas and the invading settlers and finally the relationship that exists between the "new" language and the new settlement.[1]

Chapter 5: Replacing theory: post-colonial writing and literacy theory

edit

The authors complicate the notion of European settles in the Americans, Australia and New Zealand as establishing their own 'indigeneity' given that they were not the 'first nation' of people to live on the land. The authors suggest that settler colonies had to create the indigenous to discover their "original relation with the universe."[31] The issue differs when understanding the Indians and Africans' claim to indigeneity who had to reconstruct their culture at the end of colonial rule.

The topics of language, place and theory[1] and indigenous textuality[1] are both covered by exploring the more detailed issues surrounding the relationship between the indigenous and the settler communities. The Caribbean Theories are discussed at length since the worst features of colonialism occurred in these areas, including the complete annihilation of the Caribs and the Arawaks.[1]

Chapter 5 looks at replacing the theory around post-colonial writing and literacy by examining the broader implications of post-colonialism surrounding the roles of language for not only literary theory but also for social and political analysis. This chapter covers the different theories of modernism and the colonial experiences with emphasis placed on the discovery of African culture in the 1980s and the 1990s. Before the 'discovery', Africa had no literature of note and their art and social systems could not be recognised by European critics. Africa seemed to be one nation where modernisation did not depend on post-colonisation. The "New Criticism" movement was established in order to in order to legitimise the US's literary canon to prevent the overriding influence of English tradition. This was not without criticisms. Some arguments have been put forward to question whether or not American culture is post-colonial. The authors have used the works of Michel Foucault[32][33] to cover the discourse theory which has helped them to discover the series of "rules" required for determining post-coloniality.  Counter discourse, Richard Terdiman (1985) and the post-colonial theories of ideology are covered in detail.

Language, concepts of speech, political issues and social changes are all important in feminist theory.[34][35] The idea of the 'other', under colonialist theory, is represented in this book with the struggle to express their experiences in the language of their oppressors and as a result, have had to create a language of their own. Post-colonial feminism is a post-colonial study that understands women to have been "othered"[9] who have been colonised and even forced into positions of warfare in order to rebel against imperialism and yet have been removed from any discussions.[8] The authors draw upon Spivak's theory of the subaltern who is doubly suppressed by her gender and her race.[8] The meaning and value of literature, a complex issue, is discussed as the authors ponder not only what should enter the canon but also what texts should be classified as "literature' given that many of these texts have been altered as writers add their own traditional forms of expressions to the inherited English language acquired through colonisation.

This book perceives post-colonisation as a reading strategy. It suggests that "a canon is not a body of texts per se, but rather a set of reading practices"[1] (Ashcroft, et al. p. 186) that incorporates conventions about genre, literature and about writing. The authors have used Shakespeare's The Tempest as an example of a text that has been reworked as a model for post-colonial readings of canonical works.[1]

Chapter 6: Re-thinking the post-colonial: post-colonialism in the twenty first century

edit

Chapter 6 has the authors re-thinking post-colonialism in the twenty first century. The authors concede that post-colonial theory is perhaps one of the most diverse issues in literary and cultural studies. They state that many other disciplines have used the term "post-colonial" to illustrate concerns in a number of fields including politics, sociology and economic theory, although not all have been positive in their acceptance. The Empire Writes Back uses these theoretical frameworks to understand how post-colonialism acknowledge that the colonised are continually living under an oppressive system wherein they are unable to eradicate colonial influence.

The book arose from the works of African, Caribbean and Indian writers and artists, who were discussing and debating post-colonialism and had already started "writing back"[1] in order to recuperate and re-acknowledge the pre-colonial parts of their identities. Colonial countries that produce literary texts in English translation, from native languages to common world languages, such as English, is a topic that is debated regularly, specifically by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o in his writing on the 'cultural bomb'.

In the twenty-first century, in connection with post-colonialism, the authors have covered the relationship of the following ideas: post-colonialism and cultural studies, local conditions, traditional and sacred beliefs of the colonised peoples, animals and the environment and globalisation. It concludes by analysing that while traditional globalisation increased the process of cultural imperialism, our 'neo-globalisation;[1] has actually facilitated a disturbance of Euro-centric dominance as a diaspora of writers have been able to 'write back' to the impact of the colonial phenomenon; slavery, indenture and settlement.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ashcroft, Bill; Griffiths, Graham; Griffiths, Gareth; Ashcroft, Frances M.; Tiffin, Helen (2002). The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures. Psychology Press. ISBN 0-415-28020-6.
  2. ^ Sarah Menin. "The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures". Goodreads. Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  3. ^ Mwangi, Evan (2009). Africa Writes Back to Self: Metafiction, Gender, Sexuality. SUNY Press. pp. 235–236. ISBN 978-1-4384-2697-6. Retrieved November 3, 2013.
  4. ^ "Postcolonialism", Wikipedia, 2022-05-02, retrieved 2022-05-12
  5. ^ Poyner, Jane (2016-05-06). J.M. Coetzee and the Paradox of Postcolonial Authorship. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315590233. ISBN 978-1-317-11164-1.
  6. ^ Palmer, Colin A. (2006-02-20). Eric Williams & the Making of the Modern Caribbean. University of North Carolina Press. doi:10.5149/9780807888506_palmer.6. ISBN 978-0-8078-2987-5.
  7. ^ Assayag, Jackie (2007-05-02). "Neil Lazarus, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Literary Studies". L'Homme (182): 246–248. doi:10.4000/lhomme.4132. ISSN 0439-4216.
  8. ^ a b c Morris, Rosalind C. (2010). Can the subaltern speak?: reflections on the history of an idea. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-14385-1. OCLC 690365912.
  9. ^ a b Said, Edward Wadie (12 October 1979). Orientalism. Knopf Doubleday Publishing. ISBN 978-0-394-74067-6. OCLC 489670330.
  10. ^ a b Bhabha, Homi K. (2012). The Location of Culture. Taylor and Francis. ISBN 978-0-203-82055-1. OCLC 1027300496.
  11. ^ Thiong'o, Ngu˜g˜ıwa (2020-10-20), "Decolonising the mind", The Applied Theatre Reader (Second ed.), Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, pp. 231–237, doi:10.4324/9780429355363-44, ISBN 978-0-429-35536-3
  12. ^ Helgesson, Stefan (2013-10-24). "Postcolonialism and World Literature". Interventions. 16 (4): 483–500. doi:10.1080/1369801x.2013.851825. ISSN 1369-801X. S2CID 142747762.
  13. ^ Fussell, Edwin S. (1965). Frontier: american literature and the american west. Princeton University Press. OCLC 805653316.
  14. ^ Jones, Joseph Jay (1976). Radical cousins: nineteenth century American & Australian writers. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-1223-7. OCLC 833347542.
  15. ^ Moore, Gerald (1969). The chosen tongue: English writing in the tropical world. Longmans. OCLC 732267484.
  16. ^ Walling, William; Griffiths, Gareth (1979). "A Double Exile: African and West Indian Writing between Two Cultures". World Literature Today. 53 (3): 547. doi:10.2307/40132371. ISSN 0196-3570. JSTOR 40132371.
  17. ^ McDonald, Avis G. (January 1984). "Men in fetters … a picture of man's state". World Literature Written in English. 23 (1): 174–181. doi:10.1080/17449858408588821. ISSN 0093-1705.
  18. ^ Aïta, Mariella (2014-12-04). "Spécificités de la traduction du Cahier d'un retour au pays natal vers l'espagnol". Présence Africaine (189): 211–217. doi:10.3917/presa.189.0211. ISSN 0032-7638.
  19. ^ Wake, Clive; Senghor, Leopold Sedar; Irele, Abiola (October 1979). "Selected Poems of Leopold Sedar Senghor". The Modern Language Review. 74 (4): 952. doi:10.2307/3728275. ISSN 0026-7937. JSTOR 3728275.
  20. ^ Creutzberg, P. (July 1978). "Indonesia; Selected Documents on Colonialism and Nationalism 1830–1942. Chr. L.M. Penders (ed.). University of Queensland Press. St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia, 1977. XV, plus 367 p. Paperback. A.$ 9.50. ISBN 07 022 1029 3". Itinerario. 2 (2): 84. doi:10.1017/s0165115300018362. ISSN 0165-1153. S2CID 161284827.
  21. ^ Slemon, Stephen (1989). Allegory and empire: counter-discourse in post-colonial writing (Thesis). University of Queensland Library. doi:10.14264/uql.2019.15.
  22. ^ Moore, Gerald (November 1976). "W. H. new.among worlds:An introduction to modern commonwealth and South African fiction. Ontario: Press Porcepic, 1975". World Literature Written in English. 15 (2): 463–465. doi:10.1080/17449857608588429. ISSN 0093-1705.
  23. ^ Alonso, María Alonso (2015-01-01), "Final Remarks on Diasporic Marvellous Realism", Diasporic Marvellous Realism, BRILL, pp. 207–215, doi:10.1163/9789004302396_015, ISBN 978-90-04-30239-6
  24. ^ WILLIAMS, Denis (1969). Image and idea in the arts of Guyana: being the text of the 1969 Edgar Mittelholzer memorial lectures. Ministry of Information, the National History and Arts Council. OCLC 247618999.
  25. ^ Raja, Rao (1967). Kanthapura. New directions. OCLC 152340173.
  26. ^ Reinecke, John E.; Tokimasa, Aiko (February 1934). "The English Dialect of Hawaii". American Speech. 9 (1): 48. doi:10.2307/451987. ISSN 0003-1283. JSTOR 451987.
  27. ^ Jeffares, A. Norman (June 1975). "Reviews: Lawson Memorial Henry Lawson, Collected Prose, ed. C. Roderick, Vol. I: Short Stories and Sketches I888-I922; Vol. II: Autobiographical and Other Writings I887-I922. Angus & Robertson, Sydney and London, I972; Henry Lawson, Letters I890-I922, ed. C. Roderick, Angus & Robertson, Sydney and London, I970". The Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 10 (1): 77–79. doi:10.1177/002198947501000110. ISSN 0021-9894.
  28. ^ Richey, Norma Jean; Stow, Randolph (1982). "Visitants". World Literature Today. 56 (4): 749. doi:10.2307/40138437. ISSN 0196-3570. JSTOR 40138437.
  29. ^ Tutuola, Amos (July 2014). The palm-wine drinkard and his dead palm-wine tapster in the Deads' Town. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-31154-5. OCLC 1125074973.
  30. ^ Anthony, Michael (1973). Sandra Street, and other stories. Heinemann Educational. OCLC 891486951.
  31. ^ Paul, Sherman; Emerson, Ralph Waldo; Whicher, Stephen E.; Spiller, Robert E.; Williams, Wallace E. (November 1965). "The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, 1836-1838". American Literature. 37 (3): 327. doi:10.2307/2923270. ISSN 0002-9831. JSTOR 2923270.
  32. ^ "Michel Foucault, The birth of the clinic. An archaeology of medical perception, translated from the French by A. M. Sheridan Smith, London, Tavistock Publications, 1973, 8vo., pp. xix, 212, £5.00". Medical History. 19 (4): 405–406. October 1975. doi:10.1017/s0025727300020585. ISSN 0025-7273. S2CID 45479161.
  33. ^ O'Meara, Maureen F.; Foucault, Michel; Bouchard, Donald F.; Bouchard, D.; Simon, Sherry (1978). "Language, Counter-Memory, Practice". SubStance. 6 (21): 160. doi:10.2307/3684473. ISSN 0049-2426. JSTOR 3684473. S2CID 154148631.
  34. ^ Bree, Germaine; Duras, Marguerite; Doherty, Cyril (1972). "An Interview with Marguerite Duras". Contemporary Literature. 13 (4): 401. doi:10.2307/1207439. ISSN 0010-7484. JSTOR 1207439.
  35. ^ Otten, Anna; Irigaray, Luce; Gill, Gillian C.; Porter, Catherine; Burke, Carolyn (1986). "Speculum of the Other Woman". The Antioch Review. 44 (1): 114. doi:10.2307/4611565. ISSN 0003-5769. JSTOR 4611565.
  NODES
COMMUNITY 1
Idea 7
idea 7
INTERN 1
Note 2