This essay involves an exploration of complex and fascinating acts of decentering and re-centering of writers in relation to traditional Muses as institutionalizations or sedimentations of artistic and intellectual inspiration in cultural tradition. Using the specific example of Wole Soyinka’s much discussed appropriation of Ogun, the Yoruba god of war, metallurgy and creativity as a point of departure, the paper gives what is intended as a far more complex and even more contradictory relationship between Soyinka and this chosen Muse than what we typically encounter in the criticism and scholarship on the Nigerian dramatist’s writings. This is done in two distinct though interlocking interpretive, discursive moves: first, by reading Soyinka...
The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his c...
Contemporary Yoruba society is laden with the burden of diverse societal misconducts and perversions...
This work examines Wole Soyinka’s use of the allegory through which he sneaks himself into the text ...
This essay involves an exploration of complex and fascinating acts of decentering and re-centering o...
Any valid inquiry into the meaning of any imaginative writing will lend itself to the salutary crede...
Wole Soyinka’s seminal essay, “The Fourth Stage: Through the Mysteries of Ogun to the Origin of Yoru...
History has often provided creative writers with source materials. African writers have used histori...
This study identifies the organizing principle behind Wole Soyinka\u27s writing and politics and dem...
The study of myths—their relevance and importance—has always generated interest among scholars over ...
This study examines the dramaturgy of the Nigerian Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka as a model of an aut...
Essentially a playwright, Soyinka is also recognized as a prolific essayist, poet, novelist and thea...
This paper investigates how Soyinka uses Yoruba mythology in his poem “Idanre”. It avers that Soyink...
Wole Soyinka is a most significant figure in contemporary world literature. From the perspectives of...
Text in EnglishThrough an in-depth analysis of selected texts, this study engages with the ways in w...
This dissertation is mainly on Wole Soyinka as a dramatist. It aims to show that Soyinka, far from ...
The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his c...
Contemporary Yoruba society is laden with the burden of diverse societal misconducts and perversions...
This work examines Wole Soyinka’s use of the allegory through which he sneaks himself into the text ...
This essay involves an exploration of complex and fascinating acts of decentering and re-centering o...
Any valid inquiry into the meaning of any imaginative writing will lend itself to the salutary crede...
Wole Soyinka’s seminal essay, “The Fourth Stage: Through the Mysteries of Ogun to the Origin of Yoru...
History has often provided creative writers with source materials. African writers have used histori...
This study identifies the organizing principle behind Wole Soyinka\u27s writing and politics and dem...
The study of myths—their relevance and importance—has always generated interest among scholars over ...
This study examines the dramaturgy of the Nigerian Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka as a model of an aut...
Essentially a playwright, Soyinka is also recognized as a prolific essayist, poet, novelist and thea...
This paper investigates how Soyinka uses Yoruba mythology in his poem “Idanre”. It avers that Soyink...
Wole Soyinka is a most significant figure in contemporary world literature. From the perspectives of...
Text in EnglishThrough an in-depth analysis of selected texts, this study engages with the ways in w...
This dissertation is mainly on Wole Soyinka as a dramatist. It aims to show that Soyinka, far from ...
The late South African author Lewis Nkosi described history as a hero in African literature in his c...
Contemporary Yoruba society is laden with the burden of diverse societal misconducts and perversions...
This work examines Wole Soyinka’s use of the allegory through which he sneaks himself into the text ...