The interface between oral and written forms of literature is predominant in Yorùbá textual creativities. The inclusion of oral genres in the written form of Yorùbá creative writings is purposive because it lends color to its rhythm, plot, characterization, setting, and aesthetic values. In this paper, the border-crossing between the oral and written genre is examined in select Yorùbá literary texts. A purposive selection of some Yorùbá literary texts is taken, and the texts are subjected to content analyses, using the theoretical framework of satire which derives from African cosmology and oral tradition. The select texts are Akin Ìs ò lá’s Bellow in My Belly, Débò Awé ’s Olo únlúgo, and Gbémisóyè Àyànò’s Ayédáadé, Findings of the paper i...
Studies on African drama have shown the influences and the intertextual relations between African dr...
This paper surveys the significant contributions that African oral literature has made as a tool for...
The oral lore or oral tradition had for long been the only and primary medium of communication, and ...
A interface entre as formas de literatura oral e escrita em Yorùbá é predominante criatividade textu...
The article examines the potentials of Yoruba Ifá oral literature for entertainment and education, w...
African oral literature remains a veritable source of material for African literary drama through va...
One of the touchstones in the pursuit of literacy excellence, according to Longinus, is the creation...
Despite technological innovations, orality still forms one of the aesthetic elements in the new medi...
This paper probes three broad characteristics of the African verbal art artist, namely: the sources ...
In written literary traditions the distinction between text and performance seems self-evident. The ...
The literary works of Bâ and Dadié go beyond these theorists’ wary evaluations of novels, even solvi...
Two rhetorical structural types, characterised as WH-ASK and NPWH-LET constructions, derived from th...
The article discusses Somali literature, with particular focus given to the influence of Somali oral...
African oral cultures as well as their oral literatures are vigorous. True, in some cases, elements ...
A classic means of addressing one's terror is mimesis, as my undergraduate aesthetics professor told...
Studies on African drama have shown the influences and the intertextual relations between African dr...
This paper surveys the significant contributions that African oral literature has made as a tool for...
The oral lore or oral tradition had for long been the only and primary medium of communication, and ...
A interface entre as formas de literatura oral e escrita em Yorùbá é predominante criatividade textu...
The article examines the potentials of Yoruba Ifá oral literature for entertainment and education, w...
African oral literature remains a veritable source of material for African literary drama through va...
One of the touchstones in the pursuit of literacy excellence, according to Longinus, is the creation...
Despite technological innovations, orality still forms one of the aesthetic elements in the new medi...
This paper probes three broad characteristics of the African verbal art artist, namely: the sources ...
In written literary traditions the distinction between text and performance seems self-evident. The ...
The literary works of Bâ and Dadié go beyond these theorists’ wary evaluations of novels, even solvi...
Two rhetorical structural types, characterised as WH-ASK and NPWH-LET constructions, derived from th...
The article discusses Somali literature, with particular focus given to the influence of Somali oral...
African oral cultures as well as their oral literatures are vigorous. True, in some cases, elements ...
A classic means of addressing one's terror is mimesis, as my undergraduate aesthetics professor told...
Studies on African drama have shown the influences and the intertextual relations between African dr...
This paper surveys the significant contributions that African oral literature has made as a tool for...
The oral lore or oral tradition had for long been the only and primary medium of communication, and ...