Readings in African Popular FictionStephanie Newell Broadening the view of what is considered to be African literature this text brings together examples from a wide range of African popular fiction and provides a useful reference tool for students. Includes eight primary texts including examples from Drum magazine, Alex la Guma's Little Libby - the comic strips of the Adventures of Liberation Chabalala, and extracts from popular fiction novels, novellas and short stories. Contributors also examine the social, political and economic contexts of popular narratives. STEPHANIE NEWELL is now Professor of English at the University of Sussex Contributors include: GRAHAM FURNISS, BRAIN LARKIN, DONATUS NWOGA, MISTY BASTIAN, ALAIN RICARD, RAOUL GRANQVISt, BERNTH LINDFORS, BODIL FOLKE FREDERIKSEN, J. ROGER KURTZ & ROBERT M. KURTZ, NICI NELSON, DOROTHY DRIVER, NJABULO NDEBELE, ROGER FIELD, SARAH NUTTALL Published in association with the International African Institute North America: Indiana U Press |
Contents
GRAHAM FURNISS | 5 |
? An Exploration in Postcolonial Theory | 11 |
Primary Text 1 | 33 |
Copyright | |
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African Literature African popular fiction Alhaji Abdu Anorue apartheid audience authors Cameroonian character colonial contemporary corruption Couchoro Dar es Salaam daughter Dedan Kimathi Delu discourse Drum English father Félix Couchoro Gandoki gender genres Ghana Gikuyu girl Guma Guma's Hausa Heinemann husband Igbo Indian films issue Johannesburg Kairu Kalitera Kano Kenya language Lindfors literary live London look magazine Maillu Makena Mangua marriage married Mathare modern moral mother Mphahlele Nairobi narrative Ngugi wa Thiong'o Nigeria novelists novels ogbaanje Olokun Onitsha Onitsha market literature oral Osifo pamphlets political popular culture popular literature Press printed prostitute published Rabi readers reading representation romance rural sexual short story social society Sophiatown South African soyayya books Swahili tell Terry Hirst texts theme things thriller Tonia town tradition urban village Western wife wives woman women writers Yaoundé young