European-language Writing in Sub-Saharan AfricaThe first major comparative study of African writing in western languages, European-language Writing in Sub-Saharan Africa, edited by Albert S. Gérard, falls into four wide-ranging sections: an overview of early contacts and colonial developments Under Western Eyes ; chapters on Black Consciousness manifest in the debates over Panafricanism and Negritude; a group of essays on mental decolonization expressed in Black Power texts at the time of independence struggles; and finally Comparative Vistas, sketching directions that future comparative study might explore. An introductory essay stresses the millennia of writing in Africa, side by side with a richly eloquent and artistic set of vernacular oral traditions; written and oral traditions have become interwoven in adaptations of imported forms and linguistic innovations that challenge traditional high literary norms. Gérard uses the mathematical concept of fuzzy sets to explain why the focus on Black Africa has led him to set aside for future analysis the literatures produced in North Africa, which fall under the influence of Muslim civilization, as well as the diasporic literatures of the New World. Over sixty scholars from twenty-two countries contribute specialized studies of creative writing by leading authors in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries such as Achebe, Mphahlele, Ngugi, Senghor, Soyinka, and Tutuola. Critical analyses are organized primarily around regions, reflecting different colonial languages imposed through schools and other social institutions. Some authors trace the adaptation of western genres, others identify syncretism with folktales or myths. The volumes are attentive to the heterogeneity of national literatures addressed to polyethnic and multilingual populations, and they note the instrumental politics of language in newly independent states. A closing chapter, Tasks Ahead, identifies areas for future scholars to explore. |
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twentieth century; it has now produced a sizeable amount of poetry, drama and especially prose fiction.4 While written art was thus being securely established in Ethiopia, a second wave of literacy swept over vast areas of sub-Saharan ...
twentieth century; it has now produced a sizeable amount of poetry, drama and especially prose fiction.4 While written art was thus being securely established in Ethiopia, a second wave of literacy swept over vast areas of sub-Saharan ...
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After thus giving due recognition to the unquestionable seniority of Ethiopia and Muslim Africa in the creation of written literatures, it must be admitted that the most wide-spread, and indeed all-encompassing, advance toward literacy ...
After thus giving due recognition to the unquestionable seniority of Ethiopia and Muslim Africa in the creation of written literatures, it must be admitted that the most wide-spread, and indeed all-encompassing, advance toward literacy ...
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Side by side with the interest in the ideas introduced by the white man and in the situations created by his activities, a second type of inspiration was operative in vernacular writing from the very beginning. For, in British Africa at ...
Side by side with the interest in the ideas introduced by the white man and in the situations created by his activities, a second type of inspiration was operative in vernacular writing from the very beginning. For, in British Africa at ...
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tion to the written art of the world can be achieved unless imaginative writing in African languages and in Arabic is duly taken into consideration? For our purposes, however, one especially revealing aspect is connected with the ...
tion to the written art of the world can be achieved unless imaginative writing in African languages and in Arabic is duly taken into consideration? For our purposes, however, one especially revealing aspect is connected with the ...
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In fact, as the greater part of the creative writing that came pouring out of Africa in the wake of World War II focused on the struggle against colonial enslavement and its racialist “justifications” with the view of imposing a ...
In fact, as the greater part of the creative writing that came pouring out of Africa in the wake of World War II focused on the struggle against colonial enslavement and its racialist “justifications” with the view of imposing a ...
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