The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his critical text Tasks and Masks: Themes and Styles in African Literature (1981). In this paper I argue for the reverse: that African literature is not only a hero in Africa but also a powerful proactive force in the continent’s development. This function of literature is rarely acknowledged yet the subject constitutes the academic arm of the continent’s struggles against various forces. Colonialists recognised the essence of literature as a tool for deconstructing African culture and identity. African writers and political leaders from various vantage points also recognised its centrality in the decolonisation process. Therefore a comprehensive ...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
The twenty-first century is observed to pose a number of challenges for theAfrican writer, having sc...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
History has often provided creative writers with source materials. African writers have used histori...
This paper investigates some major thematic preoccupations and stylistic trends prevalent in African...
Since the 1989 publication of The Empire Writes Back by Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Ti...
African Literature arises from the mirrors of African Community and the historical experiences of Af...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
In the 1960s, much diatribe was exchanged by African literary artists within their caucus, and outsi...
A number of African literature scholars including Emenyonu (2006) Nnolim (2006) and Hale (2006) made...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
Terri Ochiagha, in her paper African Literature and the Role of the Nigerian Government College Umu...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
For a long time, indigenous African systems, experiences, knowledge, skills, philosophy, psychology,...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
The twenty-first century is observed to pose a number of challenges for theAfrican writer, having sc...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
History has often provided creative writers with source materials. African writers have used histori...
This paper investigates some major thematic preoccupations and stylistic trends prevalent in African...
Since the 1989 publication of The Empire Writes Back by Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Ti...
African Literature arises from the mirrors of African Community and the historical experiences of Af...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
In the 1960s, much diatribe was exchanged by African literary artists within their caucus, and outsi...
A number of African literature scholars including Emenyonu (2006) Nnolim (2006) and Hale (2006) made...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
Terri Ochiagha, in her paper African Literature and the Role of the Nigerian Government College Umu...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
For a long time, indigenous African systems, experiences, knowledge, skills, philosophy, psychology,...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
The twenty-first century is observed to pose a number of challenges for theAfrican writer, having sc...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...