Looking at the map of Africa locating contributors to this collection of women writers, one is struck by the seeming over-representation from some countries -- Ghana, Algeria, Egypt, Republic of South Africa -- and the vast stretch of lands that have, apparently, produced no female with a story to tell. In her Preface, Charlotte Bruner details some of the obstacles confronting women who defy the traditions of formerly nonliterate societies, where the rigidity and permanence of the written word itself confounds a view of art as something fluid and circumstantial, where community takes precedence over the individual, where the act of writing is seen less as a means of recording and perpetuating folk materials than as a catalyst for change, an...
This essay introduces the re-issue of Zeyneb Hanoum’s 1913 volume, reprinted as part of the series C...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article looks at the Women Writing Africa project as both a response to prevailing assumptions ...
Looking at the map of Africa locating contributors to this collection of women writers, one is struc...
African Women\u27s Writing is a companion volume to Bruner\u27s Unwinding Threads, first published b...
Their rightful place: Stella and Frank Chipasula's African women's poetry Stella and Frank Chipasula...
From time to time, collections of modern African short stories like the collection here noted should...
Debates on women’s rights and gender equality in Africa often centre on how international norms are ...
Review of Women in Twentieth-Century Africa, by Iris Berger. Cambridge University Press, 2016
In recent years writings by black women outside of the US have gained acceptance, and many such work...
In Coming Home and Other Stories, Farida Karodia, South African born author now residing in Canada, ...
Book Title: The Twilight of Cutting: African activism and life after NGOsBook Author: Saida Hodzic(2...
Review of 'The Changing Face of African Literature' ed. by Bernard De Meyer and Neil ten Kortenaar
Women have historically provided vision and leadership to African countries and are now being recogn...
I take great delight in having the opportunity to review this collection ofthirteen essays having to...
This essay introduces the re-issue of Zeyneb Hanoum’s 1913 volume, reprinted as part of the series C...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article looks at the Women Writing Africa project as both a response to prevailing assumptions ...
Looking at the map of Africa locating contributors to this collection of women writers, one is struc...
African Women\u27s Writing is a companion volume to Bruner\u27s Unwinding Threads, first published b...
Their rightful place: Stella and Frank Chipasula's African women's poetry Stella and Frank Chipasula...
From time to time, collections of modern African short stories like the collection here noted should...
Debates on women’s rights and gender equality in Africa often centre on how international norms are ...
Review of Women in Twentieth-Century Africa, by Iris Berger. Cambridge University Press, 2016
In recent years writings by black women outside of the US have gained acceptance, and many such work...
In Coming Home and Other Stories, Farida Karodia, South African born author now residing in Canada, ...
Book Title: The Twilight of Cutting: African activism and life after NGOsBook Author: Saida Hodzic(2...
Review of 'The Changing Face of African Literature' ed. by Bernard De Meyer and Neil ten Kortenaar
Women have historically provided vision and leadership to African countries and are now being recogn...
I take great delight in having the opportunity to review this collection ofthirteen essays having to...
This essay introduces the re-issue of Zeyneb Hanoum’s 1913 volume, reprinted as part of the series C...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article looks at the Women Writing Africa project as both a response to prevailing assumptions ...