Postcolonial Imaginations and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture

Author:   Chielozona Eze
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9780739145067


Pages:   156
Publication Date:   17 November 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Postcolonial Imaginations and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture


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Author:   Chielozona Eze
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.390kg
ISBN:  

9780739145067


ISBN 10:   0739145061
Pages:   156
Publication Date:   17 November 2011
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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With Postcolonial Imaginations and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture, Chielozona Eze makes an important and timely contribution to the urgent project of rethinking Africa. Abandoning the damaging tropes of victimhood and difference, the epistemologies of grievance and guilt and the reactionary stance of oppositionality, Eze joins key thinkers such as Kwame Anthony Appiah, Simon Gikandi and Achille Mbembe in advancing new ways of approaching Africa that depart from both imperial and nativist imaginaries of it as either dark or wounded continent. Favouring interdependence over independence, transculturation over authenticity, contamination over purity and responsibility over innocence, Eze engages African worldliness, solicits expansive solidarities, embraces dissonance and calls for the cultivation of empathy and unsentimental love of the African space and person. Wide ranging in content as it explores Africa s multilayered realities, this significant study helps


In Postcolonial Imaginations and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture, Chielozona Eze undertakes the ambitious task of charting a new philosophical pathway for African self-empowerment. The strength of his effort rests on two audaciously provocative interventions. The book's rigorous analysis exposes the pitfalls of African cultural and literary discourses that thrive on the trope of victimhood and on the notion that morality and nobility are conferred by a history of foreign injury and oppression. Eze then posits a powerfully novel paradigm that moves African cultural discourses away from the politics and poetics of external culpability and blame and redirects them inward to scrutinize the possibilities and constraints of the African mind. Postcolonial Imaginations provides a deft and lucid interrogation of an eclectic corpus of historical and contemporary texts, buttressing this analysis with an edifying rereading of familiar African classics from Achebe to Soyinka to Fanon. By summoning a vast repertoire of philosophical interpretation to complement his rich critique, Eze is able to craft a compelling argument for why any new projects of African cultural and political renaissance require a radical self-reflexivity that is missing from the existing African cultural, literary, and critical canons. --Moses E. Ochonu, associate professor, department of history, Vanderbilt University -- Ochonu, Moses E. With Postcolonial Imaginations and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture, Chielozona Eze makes an important and timely contribution to the urgent project of rethinking Africa. Abandoning the damaging tropes of victimhood and difference, the epistemologies of grievance and guilt and the reactionary stance of oppositionality, Eze joins key thinkers such as Kwame Anthony Appiah, Simon Gikandi and Achille Mbembe in advancing new ways of approaching Africa that depart from both imperial and nativist imaginaries of it as either dark or wounded continent. Favouring interdependence over independence, transculturation over authenticity, contamination over purity and responsibility over innocence, Eze engages African worldliness, solicits expansive solidarities, embraces dissonance and calls for the cultivation of empathy and unsentimental love of the African space and person. Wide ranging in content as it explores Africa's multilayered realities, this significant study helps to shift the debate on Africa in the direction in which we need to move. --Meg Samuelson, Stellenbosch University -- Samuelson, Meg Chielozona Eze radically combines the deep reflections of a philosopher and the intellectual combativeness of an ambitious literary critic to call for the redemption--given contemporary Africa's moral, political and cultural impasse--of what he aptly calls moral imaginations. Anyone who sees this book as apologia for western knowledge systems and values, or simply as rejection of the Africanist thought, totally misunderstands it. Postcolonial Imaginations is, unabashedly, an indictment of reactionary postcolonial and nationalist ideas; a brilliant argument for the reinvention of African humanism for the twenty-first century and beyond. --Chika Okeke-Agulu, Princeton University -- Okeke-Agulu, Chika


In Postcolonial Imagination and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture, Chielozona Eze undertakes the ambitious task of charting a new philosophical pathway for African self-empowerment. The strength of his effort rests on two audaciously provocative interventions. The book's rigorous analysis exposes the pitfalls of African cultural and literary discourses that thrive on the trope of victimhood and on the notion that morality and nobility are conferred by a history of foreign injury and oppression. Eze then posits a powerfully novel paradigm that moves African cultural discourses away from the politics and poetics of external culpability and blame and redirects them inward to scrutinize the possibilities and constraints of the African mind. Postcolonial Imagination provides a deft and lucid interrogation of an eclectic corpus of historical and contemporary texts, buttressing this analysis with an edifying rereading of familiar African classics from Achebe to Soyinka to Fanon. By summoning a vast repertoire of philosophical interpretation to complement his rich critique, Eze is able to craft a compelling argument for why any new projects of African cultural and political renaissance require a radical self-reflexivity that is missing from the existing African cultural, literary, and critical canons. --Moses E. Ochonu, associate professor, department of history, Vanderbilt University -- Ochonu, Moses E. With Postcolonial Imagination and Moral Representations in African Literature and Culture, Chielozona Eze makes an important and timely contribution to the urgent project of rethinking Africa. Abandoning the damaging tropes of victimhood and difference, the epistemologies of grievance and guilt and the reactionary stance of oppositionality, Eze joins key thinkers such as Kwame Anthony Appiah, Simon Gikandi and Achille Mbembe in advancing new ways of approaching Africa that depart from both imperial and nativist imaginaries of it as either dark or wounded continent. Favouring interdependence over independence, transculturation over authenticity, contamination over purity and responsibility over innocence, Eze engages African worldliness, solicits expansive solidarities, embraces dissonance and calls for the cultivation of empathy and unsentimental love of the African space and person. Wide ranging in content as it explores Africa's multilayered realities, this significant study helps to shift the debate on Africa in the direction in which we need to move. --Meg Samuelson, Stellenbosch University -- Samuelson, Meg Chielozona Eze radically combines the deep reflections of a philosopher and the intellectual combativeness of an ambitious literary critic to call for the redemption--given contemporary Africa's moral, political and cultural impasse--of what he aptly calls moral imaginations. Anyone who sees this book as apologia for western knowledge systems and values, or simply as rejection of the Africanist thought, totally misunderstands it. Postcolonial Imagination is, unabashedly, an indictment of reactionary postcolonial and nationalist ideas; a brilliant argument for the reinvention of African humanism for the twenty-first century and beyond. --Chika Okeke-Agulu, Princeton University -- Okeke-Agulu, Chika


Author Information

Chielozona Eze is associate professor of English and postcolonial studies at Northeastern Illinois University, Chicago.

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