This article examines the emergence of popular detective fiction in Africa as part of a new third wave of literature. While the new wave is a very particular response to conditions on the continent it nevertheless taps into the main streams of detective fiction that have emerged from Britain and in some respects the USA in the last hundred years. In particular this article focuses on the No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency series by Alexander McCall Smith and examines ways in which the postcolony reproduces the colony and how, in some respects the erstwhile empire desires to produce the postcolony. Keywords: African literature, detective fiction, Alexander McCall SmithTydskrif vir Letterkunde • 43(2) • 2006: 123-14
This thesis examines the portrayal of the police in South African literature written in English (or ...
In this essay we demonstrate how the burgeoning field of South African crime fiction has responded t...
This essay is a preliminary examination of crime and violence in postcolonial Kenyan fiction. It exa...
This article examines the emergence of popular detective fiction in Africa as part of a new third wa...
Crime fiction is an emergent category in South African literary studies. This introduction positions...
This article aims to examine the portrayal of African migrants and South Africa’s relationship to t...
Crime writing, long time considered to be of minor quality, generally seeks to reach a large audienc...
From its very inception, detective fiction has enjoyed a great popularity among the young and the ol...
Crime fiction, if you choose to classify it in its broadest sense, has a very long history. Detectiv...
Abstract: This article takes up the question of “crime writing” and rejoins the debate around whethe...
In this article I examine a selection of debut novels published in South Africa in the period 1999 –...
A dissertation submitted to the Wits School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesb...
This article is a review of a burgeoning literary genre, South African crime fiction, as much as it ...
Crime fiction and colonial literatures were both established as literary genres in the nineteenth ce...
Text in EnglishThe study unravels moral perversion in selected post-independence detective Shona nov...
This thesis examines the portrayal of the police in South African literature written in English (or ...
In this essay we demonstrate how the burgeoning field of South African crime fiction has responded t...
This essay is a preliminary examination of crime and violence in postcolonial Kenyan fiction. It exa...
This article examines the emergence of popular detective fiction in Africa as part of a new third wa...
Crime fiction is an emergent category in South African literary studies. This introduction positions...
This article aims to examine the portrayal of African migrants and South Africa’s relationship to t...
Crime writing, long time considered to be of minor quality, generally seeks to reach a large audienc...
From its very inception, detective fiction has enjoyed a great popularity among the young and the ol...
Crime fiction, if you choose to classify it in its broadest sense, has a very long history. Detectiv...
Abstract: This article takes up the question of “crime writing” and rejoins the debate around whethe...
In this article I examine a selection of debut novels published in South Africa in the period 1999 –...
A dissertation submitted to the Wits School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesb...
This article is a review of a burgeoning literary genre, South African crime fiction, as much as it ...
Crime fiction and colonial literatures were both established as literary genres in the nineteenth ce...
Text in EnglishThe study unravels moral perversion in selected post-independence detective Shona nov...
This thesis examines the portrayal of the police in South African literature written in English (or ...
In this essay we demonstrate how the burgeoning field of South African crime fiction has responded t...
This essay is a preliminary examination of crime and violence in postcolonial Kenyan fiction. It exa...