Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- EDITORIAL ARTICLE
- ARTICLES
- Gender Politics, Home & Nation in Zulu Sofola's King Emene:
- The Militant Writer in Sembène's Early Fiction:
- Psychological Violence in Bessie Head's
- Constructing the Destructive City:
- History, Progress & Prospects inthe Development of African Literature:
- Dispelling the Myth of the ‘Silent Woman’:
- Interrogating Dichotomies, Reconstructing Emancipation:
- Es'kia Mphahlele's Enduring Truth in Down Second Avenue
- A Tribute to Cyprian O.D. Ekwensi (26 September 1921–4 November 2007): The Writer, the Man & His Era
- REVIEWS
Constructing the Destructive City:
Representations of Lagos in Cyprian Ekwensi's
from ARTICLES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- EDITORIAL ARTICLE
- ARTICLES
- Gender Politics, Home & Nation in Zulu Sofola's King Emene:
- The Militant Writer in Sembène's Early Fiction:
- Psychological Violence in Bessie Head's
- Constructing the Destructive City:
- History, Progress & Prospects inthe Development of African Literature:
- Dispelling the Myth of the ‘Silent Woman’:
- Interrogating Dichotomies, Reconstructing Emancipation:
- Es'kia Mphahlele's Enduring Truth in Down Second Avenue
- A Tribute to Cyprian O.D. Ekwensi (26 September 1921–4 November 2007): The Writer, the Man & His Era
- REVIEWS
Summary
The late Cyprian Ekwensi is an author whose oeuvre cannot easily be categorised in any single genre. Situating his works in various regions of Nigeria and writing for a readership that transcends age, the most comprehensive way to describe Ekwensi is as a Nigerian author in both his nationality and the scope of his literature. The gamut of his works covers the entire nation, through an assortment of protagonists, settings and cultures. The characters range from Fulani cattlemen to Lagos prostitutes and his literary works traverse the nation, guiding the reader through the vast landscapes of Nigeria. Encountering different cultures, customs and religions, his readers are provided a platform on which to engage in a multiplicity of identities within the nation. Ekwensi's pan-Nigerian literature reflects his life experience. Born in Minna, Northern Nigeria to Igbo parents (from Eastern Nigeria), he later studied at Ibadan and Lagos in Western Nigeria. As a proud Nigerian, Ekwensi had a good knowledge of the geography of the country. ’…Every year I go round Nigeria two or three times by car, by road, so I know my country and I love it’ (Duerden and Pieterse 1972, 83).
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- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012