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- EMERGING PERSPECTIVES ON CHINUA ACHEBE, VOL. 1: Omenka the Master Artist, Critical Perspectives on Achebe's Fiction edited by Ernest N. Emenyonu (HARDCOVER)
EMERGING PERSPECTIVES ON CHINUA ACHEBE, VOL. 1: Omenka the Master Artist, Critical Perspectives on Achebe's Fiction edited by Ernest N. Emenyonu (HARDCOVER)
EMERGING PERSPECTIVES ON CHINUA ACHEBE, VOL. 1: Omenka the Master Artist, Critical Perspectives on Achebe's Fiction edited by Ernest N. Emenyonu (HARDCOVER)
Product Description
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. His narrative style and techniques have given rise to what has been characterized as the African art of the novel. It consists of ingenious indigenization and skillful manipulation of the English language to enable it convey essential and intricate traditional African speech patterns and sensibilities. It also portrays an assertive African cultural voice telling African stories in an African manner.
OMENKA is the first of a two volume celebration of this modern African literary tradition which owes it origin to Achebe's landmark classic novel, Things Fall Apart (1958), which in over 55 languages and with more than 8 million copies in print, is the most widely read African novel, inside and outside the African continent. The essays provide global perspectives of Chinua Achebe as an artist with a proper sense of history and an imaginative writer with an inviolable sense of cultural mission and political commitment.
This book is divided into eight parts. Part 1 consists of eleven essays which discuss authoritatively various aspects of Things Fall Apart, from innovative stylistics to intriguing feminism in the African context, and from cross-cultural dimensions to Igbo cosmology. The four essays in Part II focus on No Longer at Ease, highlighting with intense particularity the artistic and situational significance of this least studied of Achebe's novels. Part III contains six essays on Arrow of God, ranging from discourse om the duality of the Chief Priest, Ezelu's personality, to the tragic muse and cultural hero in the novel. There are four essays in Part IV. These examine the various facets of A Man of the People, from political symbolism to Igbo (African) leadership ideals. Part V focuses on Anthills of the Savannah and its five essays argue the woman question and the phenomenon of military dictatorships from intriguingly contrasting perspectives. Part VI consists of two eloquent essays on Achebe's response to the Nigerian civil war in Girls at war and Other Stories and Beware Soul Brother and Other Poems. Part VII is devoted to the symbolism in Achebe's short stories, using the "The Mad Men" for precise illustration. The book ends with Part VIII which has four essays focused on the versatile thematic dimensions and artistic dexterity in Achebe's four books for younger readers.
Ernest N. Emenyonu is chair to the department of African Studies at University of Michigan, Flint. He served as deputy vice-chancellor at University of Calabar, Nigeria, and also as provost of Alvan Ikoku College of Education in Owerri, Nigeria. He is the author of several works of criticism on African literature as well as fiction including a collection of short stories and four children's books.