When moving up the corporate ladder depends on the success to the second language proficiency test, an employee’s anxiety could reach a dramatic height.
“The funny part about Perdida’s cry was the tears. Normally, except for Black Africans, people’s tears run through their noses. Don’t ask me why. That really baffles me. On the other hand, African people’s tears come directly out of their eyes and quietly run through their cheeks before vanishing somewhere in the beard, for those who have one. Perdida’s tears were following the latter pattern. Was she some kind of a repressed Black African? Hard to say. But for sure, she didn’t look Black at all. With her blond hair, her blue eyes, and her shining light complexion, she must have been of Swedish descent. I ventured toward her classroom, wondering what was actually going on.”
Osée Kamga is a Ph.D. in communication, a university scholar, an essayist and a fiction writer. He is the author of:
Jacques le narrateur, 2000
La tourterelle noire, 2004
Le licencié, 2006
Et si le développement nous trompait—Le modèle ivoirien en point de mire, 2006
Mère porteuse, 2012
Presse écrite—Outils pour débutants, 2017