In the article the worldview of the Igbo people is analyzed. The most influential Nigerian writer Ch. Achebe belonged to Igbo ethnic group. Thus the author’s native culture became the source of creating images in his texts. As the author lived on the “crossroads of cultures” – the Western European and the African, he was influenced by Christian education and tribal African traditions. As the writer realized that the vast majority of Europeans were not familiar with the life of Igbo, in his works he tried to convey as much as possible the life and traditions of the tribe. Such detailed descriptions contribute to a better understanding of his texts. Though, at first glance, his works are overloaded with ethnographic material, all the realia a...
This article examines ethnic survival in three of Chinua Achebe’s novels, using postcolonial theory....
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Chinua Achebe is a father of modern African Literature, who was awarded the Nigerian National order ...
Reclaiming for one’s root doesn’t state that one has no root. As long as one has roots intact, one s...
The colonial invaders and their repressive means of governance in Africa were not the only reasons t...
Chinua Achebe (1930- 2013) published his first novel Things Fall Apart (TFA) in 1958. Achebe wrote T...
The religiosity among Igbo people is presented across the analysis of the Chinua Achebe’s novel No l...
This research is aimed at reflecting how Chinua Achebe reveals the religious life of Igbo people bef...
This article aims at raising the different aspects of life of Nigerian people prior independence and...
Many novels display an intense interest in culture, traditions and the conflict between two differen...
This article argues that the genius of Chinua Achebe as a novelist was definitely assisted by the ad...
Department of Linguistics, African and Asian Studies, University of Lagos,, Nigeri
This paper deals with Chinua Achebe’s (1930-2013) No Longer at Ease (1960) which depicts the dissemi...
This article examines ethnic survival in three of Chinua Achebe’s novels, using postcolonial theory....
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Chinua Achebe is a father of modern African Literature, who was awarded the Nigerian National order ...
Reclaiming for one’s root doesn’t state that one has no root. As long as one has roots intact, one s...
The colonial invaders and their repressive means of governance in Africa were not the only reasons t...
Chinua Achebe (1930- 2013) published his first novel Things Fall Apart (TFA) in 1958. Achebe wrote T...
The religiosity among Igbo people is presented across the analysis of the Chinua Achebe’s novel No l...
This research is aimed at reflecting how Chinua Achebe reveals the religious life of Igbo people bef...
This article aims at raising the different aspects of life of Nigerian people prior independence and...
Many novels display an intense interest in culture, traditions and the conflict between two differen...
This article argues that the genius of Chinua Achebe as a novelist was definitely assisted by the ad...
Department of Linguistics, African and Asian Studies, University of Lagos,, Nigeri
This paper deals with Chinua Achebe’s (1930-2013) No Longer at Ease (1960) which depicts the dissemi...
This article examines ethnic survival in three of Chinua Achebe’s novels, using postcolonial theory....
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...
ABSTRACT This study aims to establish the Igbo tradition in Nigerian literature through the use of E...