African Literature Opinions by Chinua Achebe and Ngugi wa Thiong’o

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Dedication is the quintessence of African literature. Well, for the most part of the advancing measures going on recently, most people however regard this questionable. The centre of attention in this discussion is not to engaging in fighting the argument out. Having four literary Nobel laureates in the precedent two decades, that is, Wole Soyinka, J.M. Coetzee, Idris Mahfouz, Nadine Godimer modern African literature has reached acceptable and respectable standards that should be appreciated and respected. On one occasion when a writer hails the coveted Nobel Prize for his or her literature works culture assumes an implication that is accorded to it. It is because of this reason that it is paramount to reconsider the contemporary custom of African literature (Jussawalla, 1992).

There has been notions and perceptions of the treatment or adaptation of African literature as a perception that Africa’s is a cultural body. It is referred by Chinua Achebe as a metaphysical landscape. This term refers to a geographical entity that has surpassed historical experiences. It is also this perception that also gave rise to Organisations of National Unity and also the African Union. Conferences such as the African Writers’ Conference that happened at the Makerere University in the year 1962 discuss the nature and argue the role played by African literature in the African context.

Despite all this deliberations, the consultation undertaken has not generated any agreement. In the contrary they have emphasized the continental perceived notion of the superiority of the creative writing only exploring the African so called metaphysical landscape in one way or the other focusing on an African realization. The Africa-metaphysical-landscape conditi...

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...languages.

They envision a time when governments will create elaborative setting for advancement of African languages in terms of policies and resources. In his infamous public lecture at a local university in Kenya, Ngugi wa Thiong’o demonstrates and comments the he still thinks that art is undervalued in African countries. He proposes the need to advance literature and art in general in developing countries as a whole. This will go a long way in advancing literature in modern Africa.

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Work Cited

Asomba, B. (2001) Onwuamaeze. The Heritage of Black Literature. Lagos: Pumark Nigeria

Ltd.

Jussawalla, F & Reed D(1992). Interviews with Writers of the Post-Colonial World.

Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi.

Wa Thiong’o, N. (1986). Decolonising the Mind: The Politics of Language in African

Literature. Kenya: Heinemann

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