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The Rise of the African Novel - Politics of Language, Identity, and Ownership (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,186
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The Rise of the African Novel - Politics of Language, Identity, and Ownership (Hardcover)
Series: African Perspectives
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The Rise of the African Novel is the first book to situate South
African and African-language literature of the late 1880s through
the early 1940s in relation to the literature of decolonization
that spanned the 1950s through the 1980s, and the contemporary
generation of established and emerging continental and diaspora
African writers of international renown. Calling it a major crisis
in African literary criticism, Mukoma Wa Ngugi considers key
questions around the misreading of African literature: Why did
Chinua Achebe's generation privilege African literature in English
despite the early South African example? What are the costs of
locating the start of Africa's literary tradition in the wrong
literary and historical period? What does it mean for the current
generation of writers and scholars of African literature not to
have an imaginative consciousness of their literary past? While
acknowledging the importance of Achebe's generation in the African
literary tradition, Mukoma Wa Ngugi challenges that narrowing of
the identities and languages of the African novel and writer. In
restoring the missing foundational literary period to the African
literary tradition, he shows how early South African literature, in
both aesthetics and politics, is in conversation with the
literature of the African independence era and contemporary rooted
transnational literatures. This book will become a foundational
text in African literary studies, as it raises questions about the
very nature of African literature and criticism. It will be
essential reading for scholars of African literary studies as well
as general readers seeking a greater understanding of African
literary history, and the ways in which critical consensus can be
manufactured and rewarded at the expense of a larger and historical
literary tradition.
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