Afro Asian Lit
Afro Asian Lit
Afro Asian Lit
INDIA
1. Literary Periods. The Indus Valley civilization flourished in northern India between
2500 and 1500 B.C. The Aryans, a group of nomadic warriors and herders, were the
earliest known migrants into India. They brought with them a well-developed language
and literature and a set of religious beliefs.
a) Vedic Period (1500 B.C. –500 B.C.). This period is named for the Vedas, a set of
hymns that formed the cornerstone of Aryan culture. Hindus consider the Vedas, which
were transmitted orally by priests, to be the most sacred of all literature for they believe
these to have been revealed to humans directly by the gods.
Death was not then nor was there aught immortal: no sign was there, the day’s
and night’s divider.
That one thing, breathless, breathed by its own nature: apart from it was nothing
whatsoever.
b) Epic and Buddhist Age (500 B.C. – A.D.). The period of composition of the two
great epics, Mahabharata and the Ramayana. This time was also the growth of
later Vedic literature, new Sanskrit literature, and Buddhist literature in
Pali. The Dhammapada was also probably composed during this
period. The Maurya Empire (322-230 B.C.) ruled by Ashoka promoted Buddhism
and preached goodness, nonviolence, and ‘righteousness’ although this period was
known for warfare and iron-fisted rule. The Gupta Dynasty (320-467 B.C.) was the
next great political power. During this time, Hinduism reached a full flowering and was
evident in culture and the arts.
The poem describes the royal birth of Rama, his tutelage under the sage Visvamitra,
and his success in bending Siva’s mighty bow, thus winning Sita, the daughter of King
Janaka, for his wife. After Rama is banished from his position as heir by an intrigue, he
retreats to the forest with his wife and his half brother, Laksmana. There Ravana, the
demon-king of Lanka, carries off Sita, who resolutely rejects his attentions. After
numerous adventures Rama slays Ravana and rescues Sita. When they return to his
kingdom, however, Rama learns that the people question the queen’s chastity, and he
banishes her to the forest where she gives birth to Rama’s two sons. The family is
reunited when the sons come of age, but Sita, after again protesting her innocence, asks
to be received by the earth, which swallows her up.
On Learning to be an Indian an essay by Santha Rama Rau illustrates the telling
effects of colonization on the lives of the people particularly the younger
generation. The writer humorously narrates the conflicts that arise between her
grandmother's traditional Indian values and the author’s own British upbringing.
Because Mother had to fight against the old standards, and because she was brought
up to believe in them, she has an emotional understanding of them which my sister I
will never have. Brought up in Europe and educated in preparatory and public
schools in England, we felt that the conventions were not only retrogressive and
socially crippling to the country but also a little ridiculous.
3. Major Writers.
a) Kalidasa a Sanskrit poet and dramatist is probably the greatest Indian writer of all
time. As with most classical Indian authors, little is known about Kalidasa’s person or
his historical relationships. His poems suggest that he was a Brahman (priest). Many
works are traditionally ascribed to the poet, but scholars have identified only six as
genuine.
b) Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941). The son of a Great Sage, Tagore is a Bengali poet
and mystic who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Tagore managed his father's
estates and lived in close contact with the villagers. His sympathy for their poverty and
backwardness was later reflected in his works. The death of his wife and two children
brought him years of sadness but this also inspired some of his best poety. Tagore is
also a gifted composer and a painter.
c) Prem Chand pseudonym of Dhanpat Rai Srivastava (1880-1936). Indian author
of numerous novels and short stories in Hindi and Urdu who pioneered in adapting
Indian themes to Western literary styles. He worked as a teacher before joining
Mahatma Gandhi’s anticolonial Noncooperation Movement.
Sevasadana (House of Service). His first major novel deals with the problems of
prostitution and moral corruption among the Indian middle class.
Manasarovar (The Holy Lake). A collection of 250 or so short stories which contains
most of Prem Chand’s best works.
Godan (The Gift of a Cow). This last novel was Prem Chand’s masterpiece and it deals
with his favorite theme – the hard and unrewarding life of the village peasant.
d) Kamala Markandaya (1924). Her works concern the struggles of contemporary
Indians with conflicting Eastern and Western values. A Brahman, she studied at
Madras University then settled in England and married an Englishman. In her fiction,
Western values typically are viewed as modern and materialistic, and Indian values as
spiritual and traditional.
Nectar in a Sieve. Her first novel and most popular work is about an Indian
peasant’s narrative of her difficult life.
e) R. K. Narayan (1906). One of the finest Indian authors of his generation writing in
English. He briefly worked as a teacher before deciding to devote himself full-time to
writing. All of Narayan’s works are set in the fictitious South Indian town of
Malgudi. They typically portray the peculiarities of human relationships and the ironies
of Indian daily life, in which modern urban existence clashes with ancient tradition. His
style is graceful, marked by genial humor, elegance, and simplicity.
Swami and Friends. His first novel is an episodic narrative recounting the
adventures of a group of schoolboys.
Novels: The English Teacher (1945), Waiting for the Mahatma (1955), The
Guide (1958), The Man-Eater of Malgudi (1961), The Vendor of Sweets
(1967), A Tiger for Malgudi (1983), and The World of Nagaraj (1990).
Collection of Short Stories: Lawley Road (1956), A Horse and Two Goats and
Other Stories (1970), Under the Banyan Tree and Other Stories
(1985), and Grandmother’s Tale (1992).
f) Anita Desai (1937). An English-language Indian novelist and author of children’s
books, she is considered India’s premier imagist writer. She excelled in evoking
character and mood through visual images. Most of her works reflect Desei’s tragic view
of life.
Cry, the Peacock. Her first novel addresses the theme of the suppression and
oppression of Indian women.
Clear Light of Day. Considered the author’s most successful work, this is a highly
evocative portrait of two sisters caught in the lassitude of Indian life. This was
shortlisted for the 1980 Booker Prize.
Fire on the Mountain. This work was criticized as relying too heavily on imagery at
the expense of plot and characterization, but it was praised for its poetic symbolism and
use of sounds. This won for her the Royal Society of Literature’s Winifred Holtby
Memorial Prize.
g) Vir Singh (1872-1957). A Sikh writer and theologian, he wrote at a time when Sikh
religion and politics and the Punjabi language were under heavy attack by the English
and Hindus. He extolled Sikh courage, philosophy, and ideals, earning respect for the
Punjabi language as a literary vehicle.
Kalghi Dhar Chamatkar. This novel is about the life of the 17th century guru
Gobind Singh.
Other novels on Sikh philosophy and martial excellence include Sundri
(1898) and Bijai Singh (1899).
h) Arundhati Roy. A young female writer whose first book The God of Small
Things won for her a Booker Prize.
A. CHINA
a) Shang Dynasty (1600 B.C.). During this time, the people practiced a religion based
on the belief that nature was inhabited by many powerful gods and spirits. Among the
significant advances of this period were bronze working, decimal system, a twelve-
month calendar and a system of writing consisting of 3,000 characters.
b) Chou Dynasty (1100 B.C. – 221 B.C.). This was the longest of all the dynasties and
throughout most of this period China suffered from severe political disunity and
upheaval. This era was also known as the Hundred Schools period because of the many
competing philosophers and teachers who emerged the most influential among them
being Lao Tzu, the proponent of Taoism, and Confucius, the founder of
Confucianism. Lao Tzu stressed freedom, simplicity, and the mystical contemplation of
nature whereas Confucius emphasized a code of social conduct and stressed the
importance of discipline, morality, and knowledge.
The Book of Songs, (Shih Ching) first compiled in the 6th century B.C., is the oldest
collection of Chinese poetry and is considered a model of poetic expression and moral
insight. The poems include court songs that entertained the aristocracy, story songs
that recounted Chou dynasty legends, hymns that were sung in the temples
accompanied by dance and brief folk songs and ballads. Although these poems were
originally meant to be sung, their melodies have long been lost.
c) Ch’in Dynasty (221 B.C. – 207 B.C.). This period saw the unification of China and the
strengthening of central government. Roads connecting all parts of the empire were
built and the existing walls on the northern borders were connected to form the Great
Wall of China.
d) Han Dynasty (207 B.C. – A.D. 220). This period was one of the most glorious eras of
Chinese history and was marked by the introduction of Buddhism from India.
e) T’ang Dynasty (A.D. 618-960). Fine arts and literature flourished during this era
which is viewed as the Golden Age of Chinese civilization. Among the technological
advances of this time were the invention of gunpowder and the block printing.
The T’ang Poets. Chinese lyrical poetry reached its height during the T’ang
Dynasty. Inspired by scenes of natural beauty, T’ang poets wrote about the fragile
blossoms in spring, the falling of leaves in autumn, or the changing shape of the moon.
2. Philosophy and Religion. Chinese literature and all of Chinese culture has been
profoundly influenced by three great schools of thought: Confucianism, Taoism, and
Buddhism. Unlike Western religions, Chinese religions are based on the perception of
life as a process of continual change in which opposing forces, such as heaven and earth
or light and dark, balance one another. These opposites are symbolized by
the Yin and Yang. Yin, the passive and feminine force, counterbalances yang, the
active and masculine force, each contains a ‘seed’ of the other, as represented in the
traditional yin-yang symbol.
a) Confucianism provides the Chinese with both a moral order and an order for the
universe. It is not a religion but it makes individuals aware of their place in the world
and the behavior appropriate to it. It also provides a political and social philosophy.
Confucius was China’s most famous teacher, philosopher, and political theorist, whose
ideas have influenced all civilizations of East Asia. According to tradition, Confucius
came from an impoverished family of the lower nobility. He became a minor
government bureaucrat but was never give a position of high office. He criticized
government policies and spent the greater part of his life educating a group of
disciples. Confucius was not a religious leader in the ordinary sense, for his teaching
was essentially a social ethic. Confucian politics is hierarchical but not absolute and the
political system is described by analogy with the family. There are five key Confucian
relationships: emperor and subject, father and son, husband and wife, older brother and
younger brother, friend and friend.
The Analects (Lun Yu) is one of the four Confucian texts. The sayings range from
brief statements to more extended dialogues between Confucius and his
students. Confucius believes that people should cultivate the inherent goodness within
themselves –unselfishness, courage, and honor – as an ideal of universal moral and
social harmony. The Analects instructs on moderation in all things through moral
education, the building of a harmonious family life, and the development of virtues such
as loyalty, obedience, and a sense of justice. It also emphasizes filial piety and concern
with social and religious rituals. To Confucius, a person’s inner virtues can be fully
realized only through concrete acts of ‘ritual propriety’ or proper behavior toward other
human beings.
b) Taoism, was expounded by Lao Tzu during the Chou Dynasty. Taoist beliefs and
influences are an important part of classical Chinese culture. “The Tao” or “The Way”
means the natural course that the world follows. To follow the tao of to “go with the
flow” is both wisdom and happiness. For the Taoist, unhappiness comes from parting
from the tao or from trying to flout it.
The Taoist political ideas are very passive: the good king does nothing, and by this
everything is done naturally. This idea presents an interesting foil to Confucian theories
of state, although the Taoists never represented any political threat to the
Confucianists. Whereas Confucianism stressed conformity and reason in solving human
problems, Taoism stressed the individual and the need for human beings to conform to
nature rather than to society.
3. Genres in Chinese Poetry has always been highly valued in Chinese culture and was
considered superior to prose. Chief among its characteristics are lucidity, brevity,
subtlety, suggestiveness or understatement, and its three-fold appeal to intellect,
emotion, and calligraphy. There are five principle genres in Chinese poetry:
b) shih was the dominant Chinese poetic form from the 2nd through the 12th century
characterized by: i) an even number of lines; ii) the same number of words in each line,
in most cases five or seven; and iii) the occurrence of rhymes at the end s of the even-
numbered lines. Shih poems often involve the use of parallelism, or couplets that are
similar in structure or meaning.
c) sao was inspired by li sao or ‘encountering sorrow’, a poem of lamentation and protest
authored by China’s first known great poet, Chu Yuan (332-295 B.C.). It was an
unusually long poem consisting of two parts: i) an autobiographical account that is
Confucian in overtones; and ii) a narration of an imaginary journey undertaken by the
persona. The sao enables the poets to display their creativity of describing China’s flora
and fauna, both real and imaginary. It is also filled with melancholia for unrewarded
virtue
d) fu was a poem partially expository and partly descriptive involving a single thought or
sentiment usually expressed in a reflective manner. Language ranges from the simple to
the rhetorical.
e) lu-shih or ‘regulation poetry’ was developed during the Tang dynasty but has remained
popular even in the present times. It is an octave consisting of five or seven syllabic
verses with a definite rhyming scheme with all even lines rhyming together and the
presence of the caesura in every line. The first four lines of this poem is
the ching (scene) while the remaining four lines describe the ch’ing (emotion). Thus,
emotion evolves from the setting or atmosphere and the two becomes fused resulting in
a highly focused reflection of the persona’s loneliness but with determination to
struggle.
f) chueh-chu or truncated poetry is a shorter version of the lu-shih and was also
popular during the Tang dynasty. It contains only four lines but within its twenty or
twenty-eight syllables or characters were vivid pictures of natural beauty.
g) tzu was identified with the Sung dynasty. It is not governed by a fixed number of verses
nor a fixed number of characters per verse. The tzu lyrics were sung to the tunes of
popular melodies.
B. JAPAN
c) The Tokugawa Shogonate in the late 1500s crushed the warring feudal lords and
controlled all of Japan from a new capital at Edo, now Tokyo. By 1630 and for two
centuries, Japan was a closed society: all foreigners were expelled, Japanese Christians
were persecuted, and foreign travel was forbidden under penalty of death. The
shogonate was ended in 1868 when Japan began to trade with the Western
powers. Under a more powerful emperor, Japan rapidly acquired the latest
technological knowledge, introduced universal education, and created an impressive
industrial economy.
Buson
Blossoms on the pear;
and a woman in the moonlight
reads a letter there…
Sokan
If to the moon
one puts a handle – what
a splendid fan!
Onitsura
Even stones in streams
of mountain water compose
songs to wild cherries.
6. Drama.
a) Nō plays emerged during the 14th century as the earliest form of Japanese drama. The
plays are performed on an almost bare stage by a small but elaborately costumed cast of
actors wearing masks. The actors are accompanied by a chorus and the plays are
written either in verse or in highly poetic prose. The dramas reflect many Shinto and
Buddhist beliefs, along with a number of dominant Japanese artistic preferences. The
Nō performers’ subtle expressions of inner strength, along with the beauty of the
costumes, the eloquence of the dancing, the mesmerizing quality of the singing, and the
mystical, almost supernatural, atmosphere of the performances, has enabled the Nō
theater to retain its popularity.
b) Kabuki involves lively, melodramatic acting and is staged using elaborate and colorful
costumes and sets. It is performed with the accompaniment of an orchestra and
generally focus on the lives of common people rather than aristocrats.
c) Jorori (now called Bunraku) is staged using puppets and was a great influence on
the development of the Kabuki.
d) Kyogen is a farce traditionally performed between the Nō tragedies.
8. Major Writers.
Seami Motokiyo had acting in his blood for his father Kanami, a priest, was one of the
finest performers of his day. At age 20 not long after his father’s death, he took over his
father’s acting school and began to write plays. Some say he became a Zen priest late in
life; others say he had two sons, both of them actors. According to legend, he died alone
at the age of 81 in a Buddhist temple near Kyoto.
The Haiku Poets
- Matsuo Bashō (1644 – 1694) is regarded as the greatest haiku poet. He was born into
a samurai family and began writing poetry at an early age. After becoming a Zen
Buddhist, he moved into an isolated hut on the outskirts of Edo (Tokyo) where he lived
the life of a hermit, supporting himself by teaching and judging poetry. Bashō means
‘banana plant,’ a gift given him to which he became deeply attached. Over time his hut
became known as the Bashō Hut until he assumed the name.
- Yosa Buson (1716 – 1783) is regarded as the second-greatest haiku poet. He lived in
Kyoto throughout most of his life and was one of the finest painters of his time. Buson
presents a romantic view of the Japanese landscape, vividly capturing the wonder and
mystery of nature.
- Kobayashi Issa (1763 –1827) is ranked with Bashō and Buson although his talent was
not widely recognized until after his death. Issa’s poems capture the essence of daily life
in Japan and convey his compassion for the less fortunate.
Yasunari Kawabata (1899 – 1972) won the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1968. The sense of loneliness and preoccupation with death that permeates much of his
mature writing possibly derives from the loneliness of his childhood having been
orphaned early. Three of his best novels are: Snow Country, Thousand
Cranes, and Sound of the Mountains. He committed suicide shortly after the
suicide of his friend Mishima.
Junichiro Tanizaki (1886 –1965) is a major novelist whose writing is
characterized by eroticism and ironic wit. His earliest stories were like those of Edgar
Allan Poe’s but he later turned toward the exploration of more traditional Japanese
ideals of beauty. Among his works are Some Prefer Nettles, The Makioka
Sisters, Diary of a Mad Old Man.
Yukio Mishima (1925 – 1970) is the pen name of Kimitake Hiraoka, a prolific
writer who is regarded by many writers as the most important Japanese novelist of the
20th century. His highly acclaimed first novel, Confessions of a Mask is partly
autobiographical work that describes with stylistic brilliance a homosexual who must
mask his sexual orientation. Many of his novels have main characters who, for physical
or psychological reasons, are unable to find happiness. Deeply attracted to the austere
patriotism and marital spirit of Japan’s past, Mishima was contemptuous of the
materialistic Westernized society of Japan in the postwar era. Mishima
committed seppuku (ritual disembowelment).
Dazai Ozamu (1909 – 1948) just like Mishima, and Kawabata committed
suicide, not unusual, but so traditional among Japanese intellectuals. It is believed that
Ozamu had psychological conflicts arising from his inability to draw a red line between
his Japaneseness clashing with his embracing the Catholic faith, if not the demands of
creativity. The Setting Sun is one of his works.
Ryunosuke Akutagawa (1892 – 1927) is a prolific writer of stories, plays, and
poetry, noted for his stylistic virtuosity. He is one of the most widely translated of all
Japanese writers, and a number of his stories have been made into films. Many of his
short stories are Japanese tales retold in the light of modern psychology in a highly
individual style of feverish intensity that is well-suited to their macabre themes. Among
his works are Rashomon, and Kappa. He also committed suicide.
Oe Kenzaburo (1935 -) a novelist whose rough prose style, at time nearly violating the
natural rhythms of the Japanese language, epitomizes the rebellion of the post-WWII
generation which he writes. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1994. Among his works are: Lavish are the Dead, The Catch, Our Generation,
A Personal Matter, The Silent Cry, and Awake, New Man!.
C. AFRICA
1. The Rise of Africa’s Great Civilization. Between 751 and 664 B.C. the kingdom of
Kush at the southern end of the Nile River gained strength and prominence succeeding
the New Kingdom of Egyptian civilization. Smaller civilizations around the edges of the
Sahara also existed among them the Fasa of the northern Sudan, whose deeds are
recalled by the Soninka oral epic, The Daust.
Aksum (3rd century A.D.), a rich kingdom in eastern Africa arose in what is now
Ethiopia. It served as the center of a trade route and developed its own writing
system. The Kingdom of Old Ghana (A.D. 300) the first of great civilizations in western
Africa succeeded by the empires of Old Mali and Songhai. The legendary city of
Timbuktu was a center of trade and culture in both the Mali and Songhai empires. New
cultures sprang up throughout the South: Luba and Malawi empires in central Africa,
the two Congo kingdoms, the Swahili culture of eastern Africa, the kingdom of Old
Zimbabwe, and the Zulu nation near the southern tip of the cotinent.
Africa’s Golden Age (between A.D. 300 and A.D. 1600) marked the time when
sculpture, music, metalwork, textiles, and oral literature flourished.
Foreign influences came in the 4th century. The Roman Empire had proclaimed
Christianity as its state religion and taken control of the entire northern coast of Africa
including Egypt. Around 700 A.D. Islam, the religion of Mohammed, was introduced
into Africa as well as the Arabic writing system. Old Mali, Somali and other eastern
African nations were largely Muslim. Christianity and colonialism came to sub-Saharan
Africa towards the close of Africa’s Golden Age. European powers created colonized
countries in the late 1800s. Social and political chaos reigned as traditional African
nations were either split apart by European colonizers or joined with incompatible
neighbors.
Mid-1900s marked the independence and rebirth of traditional cultures written in
African languages.
2. Literary Forms.
a) Orature is the tradition of African oral literature which includes praise poems, love
poems, tales, ritual dramas, and moral instructions in the form of proverbs and
fables. It also includes epics and poems and narratives.
b) Griots, the keepers of oral literature in West Africa, may be a professional storyteller,
singer, or entertainer and were skilled at creating and transmitting the many forms of
African oral literature. Bards, storytellers, town criers, and oral historians also
preserved and continued the oral tradition.
d) Lyric Poems do not tell a story but instead, like songs, create a vivid, expressive
testament to a speaker’s thoughts or emotional state. Love lyrics were an influence of
the New Kingdom and were written to be sung with the accompaniment of a harp or a
set of reed pipes.
e) Hymns of Praise Songs were offered to the sun god Aten. The Great Hymn to
Aten is the longest of several New Kingdom hymns. This hymn was found on the wall
of a tomb built for a royal scribe named Ay and his wife. In was intended to assure their
safety in the afterlife.
f) African Proverbs are much more than quaint old sayings. Instead, they represent a
poetic form that uses few words but achieves great depth of meaning and they function
as the essence of people’s values and knowledge.
They are used to settle legal disputes, resolve ethical problems, and teach children the
philosophy of their people.
Often contain puns, rhymes, and clever allusions, they also provide entertainment.
Mark power and eloquence of speakers in the community who know and use
them. Their ability to apply the proverbs to appropriate situations demonstrates an
understanding of social and political realities.
g) Dilemma or Enigma Tale is an important kind of African moral tale intended for
listeners to discuss and debate. It is an open-ended story that concludes with a question
the asks the audience to choose form among several alternatives. By encouraging
animated discussion, a dilemma tale invites its audience to think about right and wrong
behavior and how to best live within society.
h) Ashanti Tale comes from Ashanti, whose traditional homeland is the dense and hilly
forest beyond the city of Kumasi in south-central Ghana which was colonized by the
British in the mid-19th century. But the Ashanti, protected in their geographical
stronghold, were able to maintain their ancient culture. The tale exemplifies common
occupations of the Ashanti such as farming, fishing, and weaving. It combines such
realistic elements with fantasy elements like talking objects and animals.
i) Folk Tales have been handed down in the oral tradition from ancient times. The
stories represent a wide and colorful variety that embodies the African people’s most
cherished religious and social beliefs. The tales are used to entertain, to teach, and to
explain. Nature and the close bond that Africans share with the natural world are
emphasized. The mystical importance of the forest, sometimes called the bush, is often
featured.
j) Origin stories include creation stories and stories explaining the origin of death.
“Talk”
The chief listened to them patiently, but he couldn’t refrain from scowling.
“Now, this is really a wild story,” he said at last. “You’d better all go back to
your work before I punish you for disturbing the peace.”
So the men went away, and the chief shook his head and mumbled to himself,
“Nonsense like that upsets the community”
“Fantastic, isn’t it?” his stool said, “Imagine, a talking yam!”
n) Epics of vanished heroes – partly human, partly superhuman, who embody the highest
values of a society – carry with them a culture’s history, values, and traditions. The
African literary traditions boasts of several oral epics.
The Dausi from the Soninke
Monzon and the King of Kore from the Bambara of western Africa
The epic of Askia the Great, medieval ruler of the Songhai empire in western Africa
The epic of the Zulu Empire of southern Africa
Sundiata from the Mandingo peoples of West Africa is the best-preserved and the
best-known African epic which is a blend of fact and legend. Sundiata Keita, the story’s
hero really existed as a powerful leader who in 1235 defeated the Sosso nation of
western Africa and reestablished the Mandingo Empire of Old Mali. Supernatural
powers are attributed to Sundiata and he is involved in a mighty conflict between good
and evil. It was first recorded in Guinea in the 1950s and was told by the griot Djeli
Mamoudou Kouyate.
3. Negritude, which means literally ‘blackness,’ is the literary movement of the 1930s –
1950s that began among French-speaking African and Caribbean writers living in Paris
as a protest against French colonial rule and the policy of assimilation. Its leading figure
was Leopold Sedar Senghor (1st president of the Republic of Senegal in 1960) , who along
with Aime Cesaire from Martinique and Leo Damas from French Guina, began to
examine Western values critically and to reassess African culture. The movement
largely faded in the early 1960s when its political and cultural objectives had been
achieved in most African countries. The basic ideas behind Negritude include:
Africans must look to their own cultural heritage to determine the values and traditions
that are most useful in the modern world.
Committed writers should use African subject matter and poetic traditions and should
excite a desire for political freedom.
Negritude itself encompasses the whole of African cultural, economic, social, and
political values.
The value and dignity of African traditions and peoples must be asserted.
4. African Poetry is more eloquent in its expression of Negritude since it is the poets
who first articulated their thoughts and feelings about the inhumanity suffered by their
own people.
Paris in the Snow swings between assimilation of French, European culture or
negritude, intensified by the poet’s catholic piety.
Totem by Leopold Senghor shows the eternal linkage of the living with the dead.
Letters to Martha by Dennis Brutus is the poet’s most famous collection that
speaks of the humiliation, the despondency, the indignity of prison life.
Africa
Africa, my Africa
Africa of proud warriors on ancestral
savannahs
Africa that my grandmother sings
On the bank of her distant river
I have never known you
But my face is full of your blood
Your beautiful black blood which waters
the wide fields
The blood of your sweat
The sweat of your work
The work of your slavery
The slavery of your children
Africa tell me Africa
Is this really you this back which is bent
And breaks under the load of insult
5. Novels.
The Houseboy by Ferdinand Oyono points out the disillusionment of Toundi, a boy
who leaves his parents maltreatment to enlist his services as an acolyte to a foreign
missionary. After the priest’s death, he becomes a helper of a white plantation owner,
discovers the liaison of his master’s wife, and gets murdered later in the woods as they
catch up with him. Toundi symbolizes the disenchantment, the coming of age, and utter
despondency of the Camerooninans over the corruption and immortality of the
whites. The novel is developed in the form of a recit, the French style of a diary-like
confessional work.
6. Major Writers.
Leopold Sedar Senghor (1906) is a poet and statesman who was cofounder of the
Negritude movement in African art and literature. He went to Paris on a scholarship and
later taught in the French school system. During these years Senghor discovered the
unmistakable imprint of African art on modern painting, sculpture, and music, which
confirmed his belief in Africa’s contribution to modern culture. Drafted during WWII,
he was captured and spent two years in Nazi concentration camp where he wrote some
of his finest poems. He became president of Senegal in 1960. His works
include: Songs of Shadow, Black Offerings, Major Elegies, Poetical
Work. He became Negritude’s foremost spokesman and edited an anthology of
French-language poetry by black African that became a seminal text of the Negritude
movement.
Okot P’Bitek (1930 – 1982) was born in Uganda during the British domination and
was embodied in a contrast of cultures. He attended English-speaking schools but never
lost touch with traditional African values and used his wide array of talents to pursue his
interests in both African and Western cultures. Among his works are: Song of
Lawino, Song of Ocol, African Religions and Western Scholarship,
Religion of the Central Luo, Horn of My Love.
Wole Soyinka (1934) is a Nigerian playwright, poet, novelis, and critic who was the
first black African to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1986. He wrote of
modern West Africa in a satirical style and with a tragic sense of the obstacles to human
progress. He taught literature and drama and headed theater groups at various
Nigerian universities. Among his works are: plays – A Dance of the Forests, The
Lion and the Jewel, The Trials of Brother Jero; novels – The Interpreters,
Season of Anomy; poems – Idanre and Other Poems, Poems from Prison, A
Shuttle in the Crypt, Mandela’s Earth and Other Poems.
Chinua Achebe (1930) is a prominent Igbo novelist acclaimed for his unsentimental
depictions of the social and psychological disorientation accompanying the imposition
of Western customs and values upon traditional African society. His particular concern
was with emergent Africa at its moments of crisis. His works include, Things Fall
Apart, Arrow of God, No Longer at Ease, A Man of the People, Anthills of
Savanah.
Nadine Gordimer (1923) is a South African novelist and short story writer whose
major theme was exile and alienation. She received the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1991. Gordimer was writing by age 9 and published her first story in a magazine at
15. Her works exhibit a clear, controlled, and unsentimental technique that became her
hallmark. She examines how public events affect individual lives, how the dreams of
on’s youth are corrupted, and how innocence is lost. Among her works are: The Soft
Voice of the Serpent, Burger’s Daughter, July’s People, A Sport of Nature,
My Son’s Story.
Bessie Head (1937 –1986) described the contradictions and shortcomings of pre- and
postcolonial African society in morally didactic novels and stories. She suffered
rejection and alienation from an early age being born of an illegal union between her
white mother and black father. Among her works are: When Rain Clouds Gather,
A Question of Power, The Collector of Treasures, Serowe.