Emerging Perspectives on Chinua Achebe, Volume 1Ernest Emenyo̲nu Chinua Achebe, a literary icon of the 20th century, is widely regarded as Africa's best novelist to date, and one of the world's greatest. The essays in this book provide global perspectives of Achebe as an artist with a proper sense of history and an imaginative writer with an inviolable sense of cultural mission and political commitment. Omenka is the first of a two volume celebration of this modern African literary tradition, which owes much of its origin to Achebe's landmark classic novel, Things Fall Apart, the most widely read African novel. |
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Page xiv
... seems never to have a shortage of readers of his creative works as he never seems to lack erudite commentators on his literary and theoretical ideas . These readers , teachers , and research scholars speak eloquently about Chinua ...
... seems never to have a shortage of readers of his creative works as he never seems to lack erudite commentators on his literary and theoretical ideas . These readers , teachers , and research scholars speak eloquently about Chinua ...
Page 247
... seems to stem from the fact that much of the sociological background of the novel seems to have blurred its artistic and aesthetic merits by the sheer weight of its intrusive pres- ence . This study , therefore , is an attempt to ...
... seems to stem from the fact that much of the sociological background of the novel seems to have blurred its artistic and aesthetic merits by the sheer weight of its intrusive pres- ence . This study , therefore , is an attempt to ...
Page 421
... seem , " as Achebe seems to satirize the blindness of people to reality , especially their blindness to what constitutes real madness . He further satirizes the blindness of the so - called experts on what really constitutes madness ...
... seem , " as Achebe seems to satirize the blindness of people to reality , especially their blindness to what constitutes real madness . He further satirizes the blindness of the so - called experts on what really constitutes madness ...
Contents
Chapter | 16 |
Chapter 2 | 25 |
Critical Perspectives on Short Stories | 33 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Achebe's Things Fall achieve African Literature analysis Anthills Arrow Arrow of God Beatrice become British characters Chief Priest child Chinua Achebe Chris Christian Cited Achebe civilization clan Clara Commissioner conversation conversational analysis critical daughter death deity discourse Ekwefi elders essay example Ezeulu Ezinma father female fiction forces Heinemann hero human Ibadan Idemili identity ideology Igbo cosmology Igbo culture Igbo language Igbo society Ikem Ikemefuna individual irony Joyce Cary killing Lagos language literary living London Longer at Ease male masculinity Mister Johnson mother Nanga narrative narrator nation natives Niger Nigeria Nigerian Literature novel Nwoye Obi's Obierika Odili Oduche Ogbanje Ogbuefi Okonkwo Omenuko Onitsha political portrayed proverbs reader relationship rhetoric role shows silence social speech speech act spirit story tells tion Tortoise traditional tragedy tragic Uchendu Umuaro Umuofia Unoka village voice wife wives woman women words writing yams