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The Growth of East African Literature in English / East African LiteratureGecau, James 09 1900 (has links)
Starting with a broad attempt to define the general concerns in African literature, and the cultural esthetics which form the basis of this writing, this thesis tries to place the emerging East African literature in English literature in English into the stream of African literature, and of literature at large. It focusses particularly on the works of Okot p'Bitek and James Ngugi and treats broadly the themes emerging from the East African environment and the artistic challenges which these themes pose to the writer. It concludes that meaning and strength in this emerging literature will stem from the writer's awareness and sensibility to their environment and a willingness to make an honest and artistic appraisal of this situation. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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Literatur und Geschichte in Afrika Darstellungen der vorkolonialen Geschichte und Kultur Afrikas in der englisch- und französischsprachigen fiktionalen afrikanischen Literatur /Jansen, Karl-Heinz, January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität zu Köln. / Includes added t.p. without thesis statement. Includes bibliographical references (p. 347-353).
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Representations of Sub-Saharan African women in colonial and post-colonial novels in French /Sanusi, Ramonu Abiodun, January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2004. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 175-186). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Literatur und Geschichte in Afrika Darstellungen der vorkolonialen Geschichte und Kultur Afrikas in der englisch- und französischsprachigen fiktionalen afrikanischen Literatur /Jansen, Karl-Heinz, January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität zu Köln. / Includes added t.p. without thesis statement. Includes bibliographical references (p. 347-353).
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Mothers, madonnas and musicians: A writing of Africa's women as symbols and agents of change in the novels of Zakes MdaMazibuko, Nokuthula 31 March 2008 (has links)
Abstract
My dissertation interrogates the ways in which Zakes Mda has made women
central to his novels. I argue that the women characters in Mda's novels are key to
the idea of the rebirth
of Africa (and the simultaneous birth of a (South) African
identity) a
rebirth
made necessary by years of dispossession through colonialism
and apartheid. I will explore how on one level Mda, through magical realism,
represents women as symbols of both destruction and construction; and how on
another level he represents them as complex characters existing as agents of
history. Mda’s novels: Ways of Dying (1995), She Plays With the Darkness (1995),
The Heart of Redness (2000) and The Madonna of Excelsior (2002) critique the
topdown
approach of the postapartheid,
postcolonial
discourse of African
Renaissance a
discourse which aims to reverse the damage done to the lives of
Africans who have been brutalised by history. Mda writes an African renaissance
(with a lower case “r”), which acknowledges and explores the ways in which people
on the margins of power, recreate and transform their lives, without necessarily
waiting for politicians to come up with policies and solutions. The renaissance of
ordinary people privileges the spirit of ubuntu, whereby the individual strives to
work with the collective to achieve a more humane world. Mda’s female characters
are central to the debate on renaissance and reconstruction in that he questions
existing gender roles by
ii
highlighting strongly the rights still denied African women his
challenge to the
discourse is whether a renaissance is possible if the humanity of women (and
others marginalised by class, age, location, ethnicity, and other categories)
continues to be denied. I ask the question whether Mda, goes further, and
envisions women participating as leaders in traditionally male spaces.
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Undoing apartheid, becoming children : writing the child in South African literatureHu, Xiaoran January 2017 (has links)
This thesis examines the trope of the child in South African literature from the early years of apartheid to the contemporary moment. The chapters focus on some of the most established and prolific authors in South African literary history and roughly follow a chronological sequence: autobiographies by the exiled Drum writers (Es'kia Mphahlele and Bloke Modisane) in the early 1960s; Nadine Gordimer's writing during the apartheid era; confessional novels by Afrikaans-speaking authors (Mark Behr and Michiel Heyns) in the transitional decade; and J. M. Coetzee's late and post apartheid works. I argue that, while writing from diverse historical and political positions in relation to South Africa's literary culture, these authors are all in one way or another able to articulate their subjectivities-with their underlying ambiguities, contradictions, and negations-by imagining themselves as the child or/and through childhood. My analyses of the works under discussion attend to the subversive and transformative potential of, and the critical energies embedded in the trope of the child, by investigating narrative reconfigurations of temporality and space. Firstly, I will be looking at the ways in which the images, structures, and aesthetics making up the imaginings of the child disrupt a linear temporality and serve as critique of a teleological historiography of political emancipation and the liberation struggle. Secondly, I will pay attention to the spatial relations with which representations of the child are bound up: between the country and the city, black townships and white suburbs, the home and the street. By attending to specific transgressions and reorderings of these spatial relations, my reading also explores the ways in which spatial underpinnings and ideological boundaries of national identities are contested, negotiated, and restructured by forces of the transnational, the diasporic, and the global around the figure of the child.
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Books and pamphlets by South African Jewish writers, 1940-1962 a bibliography.Beinash, Judith. January 1965 (has links)
Thesis (diploma in librarianship)--University of the Witwatersrand.
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THREE WEST AFRICAN NOVELISTS: CHINUA ACHEBE, WOLE SOYINKA, AND AYI KWEI ARMAHBarthold, Bonnie J., 1940- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Books and pamphlets by South African Jewish writers, 1940-1962 a bibliography.Beinash, Judith. January 1965 (has links)
Thesis (diploma in librarianship)--University of the Witwatersrand.
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Aspects du fantastique et romans négro-africainsAbdourahman, Ismaël. Monneyron, M. Frederic. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Université de Perpignan, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 347-371) and index.
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