The nation writ small : African fictions and feminisms, 1958-1988
著者
書誌事項
The nation writ small : African fictions and feminisms, 1958-1988
Duke University Press, 2011
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [239]-252) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In The Nation Writ Small, Susan Z. Andrade focuses on the work of Africa's first post-independence generation of novelists, explaining why male writers came to be seen as the voice of Africa's new nation-states, and why African women writers' commentary on national politics was overlooked. Since Africa's early female novelists tended to write about the family, while male authors often explicitly addressed national politics, it was assumed that the women writers were uninterested in the nation and the public sphere. Challenging that notion, Andrade argues that the female authors engaged national politics through allegory. In their work, the family stands for the nation; it is the nation writ small. Interpreting fiction by women, as well as several feminist male authors, she analyzes novels by Flora Nwapa and Buchi Emecheta (Nigeria); novellas by Ousmane Sembene, Mariama Ba, and Aminata Sow Fall (Senegal); and bildungsromans by Tsitsi Dangarembga (Zimbabwe), Nuruddin Farah (Somalia), and Assia Djebar (Algeria). Andrade reveals the influence of Africa's early women novelists on later generations of female authors, and she highlights the moment when African women began to write about macropolitics explicitly rather than allegorically.
目次
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1
1. The Joys of Daughterhood: Achebe, Nwapa, Emecheta 44
2. The Loved and the Left: Sembne, Ba, Sow Fall 71
3. Bildung in Formation and Deformation: Dangarembga and Farah 114
4. Bildung at Its Boundaries: Djebar, Two Ways 165
Conclusion 202
Selected Chronology of African Novels 209
Notes 213
References 239
Index 253
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