Available Online July 2014 This paper grapples with the question of choice of theory in the study of African oral literature. The paper argues that while it is easy and desirable to choose a facilitative theory in the analysis of a written work of literature, such a process poses challenges when it comes to the oral type of African literature. The difficulty of such choice lies in the unpredictable and ephemeral nature of oral literature in which to a large extent it is the performer who decides what to perform and how to perform it. This leaves the literary analyst in a dilemma over what theory to apply unless the latter wants to base the choice on trial and error. Owing to the centrality of the performer in an African oral performance thi...
The main scope of the paper is to analyze modern oral art forms in view of their functions, the way ...
The article consists of personal reflections on some changes over the last generation in how the ora...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
The Idea of Performer-Critics Scholarship in African literature has had to admit the central role th...
The problem of definitions is one of those knotty issues that have featured in scholarly dis-course ...
This article entitled African Literary Communication centers on the way of transmitting message as w...
The article consists of personal reflections on some changes over the last generation in how the ora...
This paper probes three broad characteristics of the African verbal art artist, namely: the sources ...
The article defines poetry and situates the genre within an African context, with justifications on ...
The article seeks to bring out some oral traditional art forms which are prevailing in some contempo...
What is the most prototypical form of African literature? Shouldn’t we be using African languages to...
In written literary traditions the distinction between text and performance seems self-evident. The ...
This paper explores knowledge of folklore as essential to understanding the image of African women. ...
A classic means of addressing one's terror is mimesis, as my undergraduate aesthetics professor told...
In a challenging article that starts not from the conventional Western literary canon but from tradi...
The main scope of the paper is to analyze modern oral art forms in view of their functions, the way ...
The article consists of personal reflections on some changes over the last generation in how the ora...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
The Idea of Performer-Critics Scholarship in African literature has had to admit the central role th...
The problem of definitions is one of those knotty issues that have featured in scholarly dis-course ...
This article entitled African Literary Communication centers on the way of transmitting message as w...
The article consists of personal reflections on some changes over the last generation in how the ora...
This paper probes three broad characteristics of the African verbal art artist, namely: the sources ...
The article defines poetry and situates the genre within an African context, with justifications on ...
The article seeks to bring out some oral traditional art forms which are prevailing in some contempo...
What is the most prototypical form of African literature? Shouldn’t we be using African languages to...
In written literary traditions the distinction between text and performance seems self-evident. The ...
This paper explores knowledge of folklore as essential to understanding the image of African women. ...
A classic means of addressing one's terror is mimesis, as my undergraduate aesthetics professor told...
In a challenging article that starts not from the conventional Western literary canon but from tradi...
The main scope of the paper is to analyze modern oral art forms in view of their functions, the way ...
The article consists of personal reflections on some changes over the last generation in how the ora...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...