This article considers the intersection of ethics, responsibility, and literature through readings of Aminatta Forna’s The Memory of Love and Dave Eggers’ What Is the What. Examining the ways in which each novel situates its staging of African conflict against the a priori image of Africa, the article focuses on the ways in which each novel demands a readerly engagement based on alterity. Rather than viewing the text as a passive repository of ethical lessons, the article suggests that by leveraging narrative unreliability both novels create a vision of literature as the active site of ethical engagement and conflict
<p>This dissertation examines a series of novels by Aminata Zaaria, Ken Bugul, Gaston-Paul Effa, Bou...
Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination is an interdisciplinary reading of justice in li...
Hitchcott examines the representation of genocide perpetrators in fictional responses to the 1994 Ge...
This dissertation examines the workings of empathy in literary portrayals of political conflicts in ...
African novels allows to read and experience different states of unbinding (ecological, social, poli...
The paper examines Chinua Achebe’s Arrow of God, which deals with the advent of colonialism in Niger...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
That an empathic response to testimonies can lead to altruism is a key assumption of much cultural r...
“Narratives of African Improvement: Missions, Humanitarianism, and the Novel” explores the relations...
While some scholars in the past believed that art should be a vehicle for moral control, some writer...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
This article sets out to analyse a trend in literary (re)positioning in the context of socio-politic...
Exploitation of Africa’s rainforest resources, as depicted in Alice Walker’s Possessing the Secret o...
Dystopias have frequently been explored in literature to better understand the present and imagine t...
Through a consideration of representations of Africa in recent European-Canadian fiction, specifical...
<p>This dissertation examines a series of novels by Aminata Zaaria, Ken Bugul, Gaston-Paul Effa, Bou...
Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination is an interdisciplinary reading of justice in li...
Hitchcott examines the representation of genocide perpetrators in fictional responses to the 1994 Ge...
This dissertation examines the workings of empathy in literary portrayals of political conflicts in ...
African novels allows to read and experience different states of unbinding (ecological, social, poli...
The paper examines Chinua Achebe’s Arrow of God, which deals with the advent of colonialism in Niger...
My dissertation examines the historical basis and theoretical validity of African literature. It tur...
That an empathic response to testimonies can lead to altruism is a key assumption of much cultural r...
“Narratives of African Improvement: Missions, Humanitarianism, and the Novel” explores the relations...
While some scholars in the past believed that art should be a vehicle for moral control, some writer...
This paper argues that Africans should view their literature as an autonomous entity separate from a...
This article sets out to analyse a trend in literary (re)positioning in the context of socio-politic...
Exploitation of Africa’s rainforest resources, as depicted in Alice Walker’s Possessing the Secret o...
Dystopias have frequently been explored in literature to better understand the present and imagine t...
Through a consideration of representations of Africa in recent European-Canadian fiction, specifical...
<p>This dissertation examines a series of novels by Aminata Zaaria, Ken Bugul, Gaston-Paul Effa, Bou...
Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination is an interdisciplinary reading of justice in li...
Hitchcott examines the representation of genocide perpetrators in fictional responses to the 1994 Ge...