Wole Soyinka's 1986 Nobel Prize for literature was received as a well deserved international recognition not only of the distinction of Soyinka's sustained output but also as a tribute to Nigerian and African literature in general. However, given decades of irresponsible leadership in the country, a sober appraisal of the Nigerian cultural and intellectual front twenty years after the Nobel event reveals a shocking impoverishment of the institutions for the production and evaluation of literature. With a collapsed publishing industry and the continuing migration of Nigeria's most distinguished writers and literary critics to the West, Nigerian literature stands the risk of being subject to the dictates of legitimizing foreign agents of lite...
While Nigeria and South Africa are commonly perceived as the two powerhouses of African fiction,[1] ...
African Literature arises from the mirrors of African Community and the historical experiences of Af...
Any valid inquiry into the meaning of any imaginative writing will lend itself to the salutary crede...
Wole Soyinka’s 1986 Nobel Prize for literature was received as a well deserved international recogni...
Given Soyinka\u27 s creative output, particularly his unique infusion of African folk traditions and...
The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his c...
Born in 1934 as a member of the Yoruba people, Akinwande Oluwole Soyinka achieved early success as a...
This study identifies the application of the English Language as an element of the globalization pro...
Terri Ochiagha, in her paper African Literature and the Role of the Nigerian Government College Umu...
The twenty-first century is observed to pose a number of challenges for theAfrican writer, having sc...
The demise of military regime in Nigeria has, unarguably, reshaped the literary sensibility of recen...
Within the past nearly two decades or so, a number of festschrifts on African literary icons and oth...
In order to understand trends and developments on the Nigerian stage, the literary dramatist is cons...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
Still insisting on the essentialist and peculiar nature of African Literature, most older critics ar...
While Nigeria and South Africa are commonly perceived as the two powerhouses of African fiction,[1] ...
African Literature arises from the mirrors of African Community and the historical experiences of Af...
Any valid inquiry into the meaning of any imaginative writing will lend itself to the salutary crede...
Wole Soyinka’s 1986 Nobel Prize for literature was received as a well deserved international recogni...
Given Soyinka\u27 s creative output, particularly his unique infusion of African folk traditions and...
The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his c...
Born in 1934 as a member of the Yoruba people, Akinwande Oluwole Soyinka achieved early success as a...
This study identifies the application of the English Language as an element of the globalization pro...
Terri Ochiagha, in her paper African Literature and the Role of the Nigerian Government College Umu...
The twenty-first century is observed to pose a number of challenges for theAfrican writer, having sc...
The demise of military regime in Nigeria has, unarguably, reshaped the literary sensibility of recen...
Within the past nearly two decades or so, a number of festschrifts on African literary icons and oth...
In order to understand trends and developments on the Nigerian stage, the literary dramatist is cons...
Discusses the development from the 1960s to the 1980s of writings by the Kenyan author and activist ...
Still insisting on the essentialist and peculiar nature of African Literature, most older critics ar...
While Nigeria and South Africa are commonly perceived as the two powerhouses of African fiction,[1] ...
African Literature arises from the mirrors of African Community and the historical experiences of Af...
Any valid inquiry into the meaning of any imaginative writing will lend itself to the salutary crede...