Title |
Palimpsest in postcolonial African novels / |
Authors |
Ezeala, Mercy ; Samalavičius, Almantas Liudas |
DOI |
10.5281/zenodo.1173454 |
Full Text |
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Is Part of |
European journal of literature, language and linguistic studies (Žurnalas turi apsimetėliško leidinio požymių).. Bucharest. 2018, Vol. 2, iss. 1, p. 84-100.. ISSN 2559-7914 |
Keywords [eng] |
palimpsest ; postcolonialism ; African novels ; Arrow of God ; The Interpreters |
Abstract [eng] |
Critics have often discussed African novels on postcolonialism as subversive and counter-discursive to European representations of Africa with limited attention paid on the layers of inscriptions relating to pre-colonial, colonial, and postcolonial Africa embedded in these texts. This study uses the metaphor of the palimpsest to explore the layers of writings ranging from the pre-colonial culture, the colonial textual depictions of Africa and the postcolonial response and re-portrayal of Africa within selected African novels. It argues that these novels encourage Africa to reflect on its pre-colonial and colonial past with the intention of learning from its mistakes, the positive aspects of its culture and the colonial experiences, and forging a future based on hindsight rather than continually blaming colonialism for its development maladies. To achieve this, palimpsest in this paper becomes a self-reflective metaphor for understanding the effects of colonialism, the complicities of Africa in the colonial enterprise and the need to forge a future that transcends the colonial experiences. While the palimpsest provides a means of understanding the past, the ‘metaphors of transformation’ by Hall provides the impetus for progress. |
Published |
Bucharest |
Type |
Journal article |
Language |
English |
Publication date |
2018 |