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Eloquent and thought-provoking, this classic novel by the Eritrean
novelist Gebreyesus Hailu, written in Tigrinya in 1927 and
published in 1950, is one of the earliest novels written in an
African language and will have a major impact on the reception and
critical appraisal of African literature.
"
The Conscript" depicts, with irony and controlled anger, the
staggering experiences of the Eritrean ascari, soldiers conscripted
to fight in Libya by the Italian colonial army against the
nationalist Libyan forces fighting for their freedom from Italy's
colonial rule. Anticipating midcentury thinkers Frantz Fanon and
Aime Cesaire, Hailu paints a devastating portrait of Italian
colonialism. Some of the most poignant passages of the novel
include the awakening of the novel's hero, Tuquabo, to his ironic
predicament of being both under colonial rule and the instrument of
suppressing the colonized Libyans.
The novel's remarkable descriptions of the battlefield awe the
reader with mesmerizing images, both disturbing and tender, of the
Libyan landscape--with its vast desert sands, oases, horsemen, foot
soldiers, and the brutalities of war--uncannily recalled in the
satellite images that were brought to the homes of millions of
viewers around the globe in 2011, during the country's uprising
against its former leader, Colonel Gaddafi.
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