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Spurlin, William J. – College English, 1990
Broadens the space for a discussion of reading based in some degree of theorizing that has already occurred within the community of African-American critics and scholars. Argues that those engaged in reader-oriented approaches to literature need to intervene in the canonical debates and the critical practices of noncanonical literatures through…
Descriptors: African Literature, Black Literature, Higher Education, Literary Criticism

Babalola, C. A. – Phylon, 1986
Offers a new perspective on the novel, "No Longer at Ease," and comments on its sub-themes: the clash of two civilizations, the antipathy between youth and old age, human fallibility, social and moral decadence. In contrast with his earlier novel, Achebe writes topical satire for educated Africans. (LHW)
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, African Literature, Colonialism

Mbabuike, Michael C. – Community Review, 1991
Finds the commentaries of U.S. critics on the works of Chinua Achebe and other African writers ethnocentric, misinformed, and devoid of cogent analysis. Advocates a microscopic sociocultural contextualization of the works, emphasizing the nuances, history, and specifications of the African milieu. Discusses Achebe's special place in reading lists…
Descriptors: African Literature, Cultural Context, Ethnocentrism, Foreign Culture
Toward a Diaspora Literature: Black Women Writers from Africa, the Caribbean, and the United States.

Wilentz, Gay – College English, 1992
Adds to the growing dialogue on diaspora literature in relation to women's writings. Examines Anglophone West African, African-American, and Caribbean women writers for hidden and not so hidden commonalities in their works. (RS)
Descriptors: African Literature, Black Literature, Females, Feminism

Ogunyemi, Chikwenye Okonjo – Signs, 1985
Discusses the reasons for Black women novelists not allying themselves with White feminists and the differences between the two groups' perspectives. Introduces the term "womanism" to express a philosophy that celebrates Black roots and the ideals of Black life while giving a balanced presentation of Black womandom. (SA)
Descriptors: African Literature, Authors, Black Attitudes, Black Literature
Osa, Osayimwense – 2002
Eric Campbell, an English teacher, spent most of his working life in New Guinea and in East Africa, where he lived in the shadow of Kilimanjaro. He now lives in England and writes about Africa. People could expect an objective, and perhaps, a dispassionate account or depiction of African children and adults--their individual lives and…
Descriptors: African Literature, Childrens Literature, Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education
Ward, Cynthia – 1993
The works of women African writers such as Bessie Head, Mariama Ba, Buchi Emecheta, and Flora Nwapa have become increasingly familiar to North American college students during the past decade, largely through their inclusion on feminist reading lists. Because the pedagogical value of these texts lies in their presumed ability to speak for African…
Descriptors: African Literature, Authors, Cultural Context, Females

Bazin, Nancy Topping – Black Scholar, 1986
Examines the novels of two African writers to determine the nature of the black African women's experience. Attempts to determine how this experience can be analyzed in depth and breadth by progressing through four feminist perspectives: (1) personal, (2) social, (3) multicultural, and (4) spiritual/philosophical. (Author/SA)
Descriptors: African Literature, Authors, Black Literature, Black Studies

Osa, Osayimwense – Reading Teacher, 1984
Notes that Nigerian children's literature, long neglected, is beginning to receive its due scholarly attention. Summarizes its characteristics and cites popular examples. (FL)
Descriptors: African Literature, Books, Childrens Literature, Content Analysis
Paterno, Domenica R. – 1994
David Wisniewski's 1992 picture book version of the African epic of "Sundiata, Lion King of Mali" and the actual historical account of the 13th century Lion King, Sundiata, are both badly served by Disney's "The Lion King." Disney has been praised for using African animals as story characters; for using the African landscape as…
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, African Literature, Animation