The African novel, like most other literary genres from the same region, has thrived under different nomenclatures. Hence within the sub categories of the genre are critics’ labels like pre-colonial, colonial, post colonial, disillusionment, political and apolitical. Interestingly it has been discovered that the christening of the African novel has always been the directives of the self-instructive profile of the genre, adequately powered by the analogous critical idioms supplied by the critics. For instance Chinua Achebe had labeled Armah’s The Beautyful ones are not yet Born as ‘the sick book’ in his popular, and instantaneous criticism of the novel. Little did Achebe know that his emblematic utterance on Armah’s premier narrative would s...
The multitudinous nature of African literature has always been an issue but really not a problem, al...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Reclaiming for one’s root doesn’t state that one has no root. As long as one has roots intact, one s...
Examining the African suffering during the colonialism period and describing the different miseries ...
African novelists, fully aware that man lives in and is shaped by history as well as of the special ...
This paper will explore and analyse the distinct aesthetic modes/stratigies through which Achebe neg...
Chinua Achebe is considered to be the best novelist even today in African literature. The subject in...
In recent years, the celebrated status of Achebe’s early fiction within African Literature has come ...
The contact between Africa and colonialism has provoked the kind of interest which has dominated th...
The primary concern of Chinua Achebe, the recipient of the Man Booker International Prize, 2007, was...
This study attempts to identify the major preoccupations of the criticism of African fiction, and to...
Chinua Achebe is recognized as one of Africa\u27s most important and influential writers, and his no...
The purpose of this study is an examination of modern Anglophone African literature of the post-Inde...
This research analyzes the work of Chinua Achebe, the author of Things Fall Apart and Arrow of God. ...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
The multitudinous nature of African literature has always been an issue but really not a problem, al...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Reclaiming for one’s root doesn’t state that one has no root. As long as one has roots intact, one s...
Examining the African suffering during the colonialism period and describing the different miseries ...
African novelists, fully aware that man lives in and is shaped by history as well as of the special ...
This paper will explore and analyse the distinct aesthetic modes/stratigies through which Achebe neg...
Chinua Achebe is considered to be the best novelist even today in African literature. The subject in...
In recent years, the celebrated status of Achebe’s early fiction within African Literature has come ...
The contact between Africa and colonialism has provoked the kind of interest which has dominated th...
The primary concern of Chinua Achebe, the recipient of the Man Booker International Prize, 2007, was...
This study attempts to identify the major preoccupations of the criticism of African fiction, and to...
Chinua Achebe is recognized as one of Africa\u27s most important and influential writers, and his no...
The purpose of this study is an examination of modern Anglophone African literature of the post-Inde...
This research analyzes the work of Chinua Achebe, the author of Things Fall Apart and Arrow of God. ...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
The multitudinous nature of African literature has always been an issue but really not a problem, al...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Reclaiming for one’s root doesn’t state that one has no root. As long as one has roots intact, one s...