176 resultados para Ghanaian novelists
Resumo:
Postmodernism, deconstruction and subversion have been the buzzwords of the last few decades. But not any longer. Ever since the end of the millennium an increasingly perceptible desire to turn towards other concerns can be noted. Only, what comes after postmodernism? Where are we going now? Irmtraud Huber suggests some answers to these questions, focusing on novels by Michael Chabon, Mark Z. Danielewski, Jonathan Safran Foer and David Mitchell and highlighting the ways in which they go beyond postmodernism and turn from deconstruction to reconstruction. Approaching the question from an unusual direction by exploring the novelists' particular use of the fantastic mode, this book offers both further insights into the present aesthetic shift and a new perspective on the literary fantastic.
Resumo:
The paper is a comparative inquiry into the roles of Ilia Chavchavadze (1837-1907) and Taras Shevchenko (1818-1861) as national poets and anti-colonial (anti-Tsarist) intellectuals within the context of their respective national traditions (Georgia and Ukraine). During the period of their activity (19th and the beginning of 20th century) both Ukraine and Georgia were under Tsarist imperial rule, albeit the two poets lived in different periods of Russian empire history. Through their major works, each called on their communities to ‘awaken’ and ‘revolt’ against oppression, rejected social apathy caused by Tsarist subjugation and raised awareness about the historical past of their nations. The non-acceptance of present and belief in an independent future was one of the dominant themes in the poetry and prose of both. Their contemporary importance is illustrated in political discourse both after Orange Revolution in Ukraine (2004), and Rose Revolution in Georgia (2003) where both poets are referred “as founding fathers of national ideology”, the history textbooks alluding to them as “symbols of anti-colonial resistance”. To this day, however, there has been surprisingly little academic writing in the West endeavoring to compare the works and activities of the two poets and their impact on national mobilization in Tsarist Ukraine and Georgia, even though their countries are often mentioned in a same breath by commentators on contemporary culture and politics. The paper attempts to fill this gap and tries to understand the relationship between literature and social mobilization in 19th century Russian Empire. By reflecting on Taras Shevchenko’s and Ilia Chavchavadze’s poetry, prose and social activism, I will try to explain how in different periods of Russian imperial history, the two poets helped to develop a modern form of political belonging among their compatriots and stimulated an anti-colonial mobilization with different political outcomes. To theorize on the role of poets and novelists in anti-colonial national movement, I will reflect on the writings of Benedict Anderson (1991), John Hutchinson (1994; 1999), Rory Finnin (2005; 2011) and problematize Miroslav Hroch’s (1996) three phase model of the development of national movements. Overall, the paper would aim to show the importance of, what John Hutchinson called, ‘cultural nationalists’ in understanding contemporary nationalist discourse in Georgian and Ukrainian societies.
Resumo:
El análisis del discurso en Minotauroamor de Abelardo Arias, permite al lector acceder a una serie de conceptos acerca del hombre y de las realidades que le conciernen: el amor, la amistad, la belleza, el arte, el poder, entre otros. Si bien estos planteos alcanzan a todos los personajes, los mismos son focalizados, especialmente, en relación con los dos protagonistas: el Minotauro y Teseo. De hecho, Abelardo Arias ha declarado que lo que le impulsó a escribir esta novela fue, precisamente, un interrogante vital que lo asediaba: cuál era la verdadera condición del hombre moderno. El escritor mendocino parecía advertir, ya en ese entonces, una marcada degradación de los valores que han sido sostén de nuestra cultura e intenta despertar la conciencia de sus coetáneos a través de estas magníficas páginas. Es por ello que, en el presente trabajo, no sólo nos proponemos demostrar el enorme valor literario de la novela abelardariana y la riqueza de su contenido sino también señalar el vínculo que se establece entre los personajes con el concepto subyacente de “hombre normal". De este modo tratamos de dilucidar de qué modo, en este espacio literario, se proyectan las ideas sustentadas por el reconocido escritor mendocino. Con tal finalidad, se señalan, sucintamente, las coincidencias y modulaciones que se dan entre el mito original y la recreación que de él hace el autor mendocino para centrarnos en el análisis de los fragmentos que tienen como tema sustancial la “diagnosis" del hombre. Para este enfoque tomo en consideración un estudio de Alfonso López Quintás -Diagnosis del hombre actual-, publicado el mismo año de la obra que nos ocupa, y que plantea -desde otro lenguaje-, las mismas inquietudes que advertimos en el autor mendocino.
Resumo:
En la segunda mitad del siglo XIX se crearon en el Río de la Plata las condiciones necesarias para el surgimiento y desarrollo de las historiografías nacionales, humus primordial del cual emergieron proposiciones fácticas y axiomas historiográficos de cuño patriótico. La historiografía argentina, por diversidad de motivos -disponibilidad de insumos heurísticos y repertorios bibliográficos, número de intelectuales (historiadores, poetas, novelistas, ensayistas) consagrados al estudio y exaltación del pasado nacional, instituciones dedicadas al desarrollo de la investigación, recursos aportados por el Estado- tuvo un temprano e importante desarrollo e influyó de forma determinante en la historiografía uruguaya. El objeto de este artículo es conocer las modalidades, el carácter y significación de esta influencia en un autor concreto, Francisco Bauzá, a efectos de dilucidar los cimientos sobre los cuales se definieron las estructuras teóricas y la preceptivas técnico-metodológicas fundantes de la disciplina en Uruguay.
Resumo:
En la segunda mitad del siglo XIX se crearon en el Río de la Plata las condiciones necesarias para el surgimiento y desarrollo de las historiografías nacionales, humus primordial del cual emergieron proposiciones fácticas y axiomas historiográficos de cuño patriótico. La historiografía argentina, por diversidad de motivos -disponibilidad de insumos heurísticos y repertorios bibliográficos, número de intelectuales (historiadores, poetas, novelistas, ensayistas) consagrados al estudio y exaltación del pasado nacional, instituciones dedicadas al desarrollo de la investigación, recursos aportados por el Estado- tuvo un temprano e importante desarrollo e influyó de forma determinante en la historiografía uruguaya. El objeto de este artículo es conocer las modalidades, el carácter y significación de esta influencia en un autor concreto, Francisco Bauzá, a efectos de dilucidar los cimientos sobre los cuales se definieron las estructuras teóricas y la preceptivas técnico-metodológicas fundantes de la disciplina en Uruguay.
Resumo:
En la segunda mitad del siglo XIX se crearon en el Río de la Plata las condiciones necesarias para el surgimiento y desarrollo de las historiografías nacionales, humus primordial del cual emergieron proposiciones fácticas y axiomas historiográficos de cuño patriótico. La historiografía argentina, por diversidad de motivos -disponibilidad de insumos heurísticos y repertorios bibliográficos, número de intelectuales (historiadores, poetas, novelistas, ensayistas) consagrados al estudio y exaltación del pasado nacional, instituciones dedicadas al desarrollo de la investigación, recursos aportados por el Estado- tuvo un temprano e importante desarrollo e influyó de forma determinante en la historiografía uruguaya. El objeto de este artículo es conocer las modalidades, el carácter y significación de esta influencia en un autor concreto, Francisco Bauzá, a efectos de dilucidar los cimientos sobre los cuales se definieron las estructuras teóricas y la preceptivas técnico-metodológicas fundantes de la disciplina en Uruguay.
Resumo:
ABSTRACT The higher education systems throughout the continent of Africa are undergoing unprecedented challenges and are considered in crisis. African countries, including Ghana, all have in common ties to their colonial legacy whereby they are confronted with weak policies put in place by their colonizers. Having gained their independence, Africans should now take responsibility for the task of reforming their higher education system. To date, nothing substantial has been accomplished, with serious implications for weakening and damaging the structures of the foundation of their educational systems. This qualitative, single case study utilized a postcolonial theory-critical pedagogy framework, providing guidance for coming to grips with the mindset posed by Ghana's colonial heritage in the postcolonial era, especially in terms of its damaging effects on Ghana's higher education system. The study explores alternative pathways for secondary school students to transition to tertiary education--a problematic transition that currently hinders open access to all and equality in educational opportunity, resulting in a tremendous pool of discontinued students. This transitional problem is directly related to Ghana's crisis in higher education with far reaching consequences. The alternative pathway considered in this study is an adaptation of the U.S. community college model or an integration of its applicable aspects into the current structures of the higher education system already in place. In-depth interviews were conducted with 5 Ghanaian professors teaching at community colleges in the United States, 5 Ghanaian professors teaching at universities in Ghana, and 2 educational consultants from the Ghanaian Ministry of Education. Based on their perspectives of the current state of Ghanaian higher education, analyzed in terms of pedagogy, structure/infrastructure, and curriculum, the participants provided their perceptions of salient aspects of the U.S. community college model that would be applicable to Ghana's situation, along with other recommendations. Access to all, including equality of educational opportunity, was considered essential, followed by adaptability, affordability, practicality, and quality of curriculum content and delivery. Canada's successful adaptation of the U.S. model was also discussed. Findings can help guide consideration of alternative pathways to higher education in Ghana and Africa as a whole.
Resumo:
As a relatively unknown author, Mary Davys (1674-1732) has garnered scant scholarly attention and little admiration for her work. Those who have written on Davys’s prose fiction most often mention the last three texts she published, Familiar Letters betwixt a Gentleman and a Lady (1716), The Reform’d Coquet (1724), and The Accomplish’d Rake (1727), yet rare mention is made of her first three novels. Moreover, of her later novels, many scholars read them as socially conservative and as representations of Davys’s support of and belief in patriarchy. My project disproves the long-standing and generally agreed upon conceptions regarding Davys’s writings and demonstrates the significance of her life’s work to studies of the novel. By investigating contemporary cultural issues, discussing the popular genres and modes of early eighteenth-century England, and comparing and contrasting Davys’s fiction to other authors’, I explore the myriad ways in which Davys experimented with the formal properties of the novel. Also, by closely examining each novel independently, I foreground Davys’s willingness to engage with charged contemporary topics such as rape, suicide, the laws surrounding inheritance, and male privilege. Not only does she engage with these topics; there is a discernable voice of protest imbedded in the narratives. At times, the techniques Davys employed and the plots she created in her work obscured her social concerns, yet with close reading, subversion also surfaces as one of Davys’s methods. An analysis of Davys’s experimentations with prose fiction and form illuminates the ways in which those innovations allowed Davys to criticize the culture in which she lived. Furthermore, an investigation of the whole of Davys’s work and the totality of her novels—looking at both form and content—exemplifies the importance of Davys for students of feminist thought and the development of the novel.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Includes idnex.
Resumo:
v. 1-2. Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Brontë.--v. 3-4. Villette, by Charlotte Brontë.--v. 5. The professor, by Charlotte Brontë.--v. 6. Agnes Grey, by Anne Brontë. With a memoir of her sisters by Charlotte Brontë.--v. 7. Wuthering heights, by Emily Brontë.--v. 8-9. Shirley, by Charlotte Brontë.--v. 10-11. The tenant of Wildfell Hall, by Anne Brontë.--v. 12. The life of Charlotte Brontë, by E.C. Gaskell. Introduction and notes by Temple Scott and B.W. Willett.
Resumo:
"The plan adopted in this book has been to deal solely with the very greatest names in the several departments of English literature".--Introd.
Resumo:
Added title-page, illustrated.
Resumo:
I. The art of fiction.--II. Washington Irving.--III. James Fennimore Cooper.--IV. Hawthorne and Poe.--V. The realistic movement.--VI. Later tendencies.