Yahoo Αναζήτηση Διαδυκτίου

Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης

  1. by V.Jeya Santhi & Dr.R.Selvam Chinua Achebe was a distinguished Igbo (Ibo) novelist, renowned for his unsentimental depiction of the social and psychological renovation associated with the imposition of western customs, education and values upon traditional African society.

  2. Chinua Achebe was born in Nigeria, and educated there and in England, where he also worked for the BBC. In this essay, Achebe responds to European criticism of African literature, indicating the limits of claims for literature’s universality. L. Morrissey (ed.), Debating the Canon: A Reader from Addison to Nafisi © Lee Morrissey 2005

  3. IMPACT OF COLONIAL POWERS: AN ANALYSIS OF ACHEBES THINGS FALL APART AND ARROW OF GOD. Amna Shamim. This paper explores the effect of colonization on the native Africans in Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart and Arrow of God.

  4. 1 Ιαν 2013 · There are many historical examples to draw on, and in this paper we refer to Chinua Achebes novel Things Fall Apart, which examines the transformation of a dynamic and conflicted, but more...

  5. 9 Μαΐ 2018 · This article attempts to provide a new reading of Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart (1958) from the perspective of Dialogical Self Theory, which views the self as a complex set of...

  6. This paper explores Chinua Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart (1958) within the context of postcolonial theory, focusing on the clash between traditional Igbo culture and the forces of European imperialism. Achebe's work serves as a response to Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness (1899) and challenges the stereotypical portrayal of Africans.

  7. This article draws on Chinua Achebes fictional representations of the postcolony in two novels, No Longer at Ease and A Man of the People, to discuss the value of the African literary archive for an anthropological interest in elites, corruption and postcolonial decadence in the early postcolony.

  1. Γίνεται επίσης αναζήτηση για