Title: | Regimes of waste: aesthetics, politics, and waste from Kofi Awoonor and Ayi Kwei Armah to Chimamanda Adichie and Zeze Gamboa |
Author: | Ryan, Connor |
Year: | 2013 |
Periodical: | Research in African Literatures (ISSN 0034-5210) |
Volume: | 44 |
Issue: | 4 |
Pages: | 51-68 |
Language: | English |
Geographic term: | Africa |
About persons: |
Kofi N. Awoonor (1935-2013) Ayi Kwei Armah (1939-) Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (1977-) Zz Gamboa |
External link: | http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/research_in_african_literatures/v044/44.4.ryan.pdf |
Abstract: | This essay argues that waste – as a symbol, a trope, and a material condition – permits us to reimagine the link between post-independence African novels of disillusionment and contemporary works preoccupied with the tenuousness of national prosperity and identity. From Kofi Awoonor’s ‘This Earth, My Brother’ (1971, Ghana) and Ayi Kwei Armah’s ‘The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born’ (1968, Ghana) to Chimamanda Adichie’s ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ (2006, Nigeria) and Zeze Gamboa’s film ‘O Heroi’ (2004, Angola), waste is not merely an aesthetic oddity joining together these selected texts. Transforming literary representations of waste reflect a revaluation of our received notions of nationhood, the distribution of wealth and value in society, the aims of political liberation, and the legitimate means of political engagement. The author argues that waste has become an ambiguous symbol of both the uncertainty resulting from national and social disintegration and the possibility of forming renewed social bonds. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] |
If you like this academic paper, see others like it:
- Structural change in developing countries: Patterns, causes and consequences
- Ending youth unemployment in sub-saharan Africa: Does ICT development have any role?
- Exchange rate volatility and pass-through to inflation in South Africa
- Impartial versus Selective Justice: How Power Shapes Transitional Justice in Africa
- Gographies de l’insoumission et variations rgionales du discours nationaliste au Cameroun (1948-1955)
- Along the museological grain: An exploration of the (geo)political inheritance in ‘Isishweshwe Story – Material Women?’