Intertextuality in Contemporary African Literature: Looking Inward

Intertextuality in Contemporary African Literature: Looking Inward

by Ode Ogede
Intertextuality in Contemporary African Literature: Looking Inward

Intertextuality in Contemporary African Literature: Looking Inward

by Ode Ogede

Hardcover

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Overview

Intellectual exchange among African creative writers is the subject of this highly innovative and wide-ranging look at several forms of intertextuality on the continent. Focusing on the issue of the availability of old canonical texts of African literature as a creative resource, this study throws light on how African authors adapt, reinterpret, and redeploy existing texts in the formulation of new ones. Contemporary African writers are taking advantage of and extending the resources available in the existing native literary tradition. But the field of inter-ethnic/trans-national African literary inter-textual studies is a novel one in itself as the theme of African writers' debt to Euro-American authors has been the critical commonplace in African literature. Detailing the echoes and reverberations the voices of the past have generated, and the distinctive uses to which the writers are putting one another's works, the book demonstrates that the influence of local stock is significant: it is pervasive and widespread, and manifests itself in ways both random and systematic, but it is a ubiquitous presence in the African literary imagination.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739164464
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 08/18/2011
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Ode Ogede is professor in the Department of English and Mass Communication at North Carolina Central University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. When an Elephant Rustles the Bush ...
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Is a Picture Still Worth a Thousand Words? From Documentary to Investigative Realism: Cyprian Ekwensi's Jagua Nana and Flora Nwapa's One is Enough
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Lampoon, or the Power of Savage Satire, and the Visual Object of Distaste: Chinua Achebe's A Man of the People and Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. On the Politics of Love: Chinua Achebe's No Longer at Ease and Bessie Head's Maru
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Masking the Infrastuctural Frame: Christopher Okigbo and his Acolytes (Labyrinths' Aural and Thematic Echoes in Okinba Launko's Minted Coins and Chimalum Nwankwo's The Heart in the Womb)
Chapter 7 Conclusion. Coming out of Shadow: Eye on the Tradition, Looking for Consequence
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