AbstractsHistory

The contributions of Anglophone African novelists to the novel

by Joyce Walker. Johnson




Institution: McGill University
Department: Department of English
Degree: PhD
Year: 1981
Keywords: African fiction (English)  – History and criticism.
Record ID: 1591103
Full text PDF: http://digitool.library.mcgill.ca/thesisfile68629.pdf


Abstract

The works of important Anglophone African novelists, in particular those who have contributed to the growing body of literary criticism, support their claim that there is a distinctive African novel. Their novels clearly demonstrate the attachment of the novel form to the specific cultural, social and political milieu in which it is produced. The thematic concerns of Anglophone African novelists have far-reaching effects on their treatment of subject-matter and on their narrative methods. The structures of certain important novels reveal patterns of experience which are typical of African societies. Symbols and motifs which are used to further structural development in many novels are derived from situations existing within the culture and from traditional oral literature. In depicting character, novelists emphasize African social values and develop characterization with reference to the present problems facing individuals in contemporary African societies. Verbal and narrative style in the novels are also clearly influenced by local idiom and the patterns of the indigenous languages. In general, novels by Anglophone African novelists show how the social motivations of the novelist and his cultural situation control his development of themes and his exercise of technique.