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Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart A Casebook

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ISBN-10: 0195147642

ISBN-13: 9780195147643

Edition: 2003

Authors: Isidore Okpewho

List price: $70.00
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Chinua Achebe is Africa's most prominent writer, and Things Fall Apart (1958) is the most renowned and widely-read African novel in the global literary canon. Translated into close to sixty languages, Things Fall Apart is the novel that inaugurated the long and continuing tradition of postcolonial inquiry into the problematic relations between the West and the countries of the Third World that were once European colonies. This collection explores the artistic, multicultural, and global significance of Things Fall Apart from a variety of critical perspectives. The essays selected for this casebook represent the most important and well-established critical work written on the novel to date.…    
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Book details

List price: $70.00
Copyright year: 2003
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 5/15/2003
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 288
Size: 8.19" wide x 5.51" long x 0.98" tall
Weight: 0.836
Language: English

A novelist, poet, and oral literary scholar, Isidore Okpewho is currently a professor of African-American Studies and Comparative Literature at the State University of New York at Binghamton. Born at Asaba in the Delta State of Nigeria, he was educated at St. Patrick's College, Asaba, and later at the University of Ibadan, where he earned a first class Honors B.A. degree. For six years after his graduation, he worked as an editor for Longman publishers, but he then opted for an academic career. After obtaining his Ph.D. in comparative literature at the University of Colorado in 1974, he joined the University of Ibadan, where he rose to the rank of full professor. As a scholar, Okpewho is…    

Introduction
The African Writer and the English Language
Igbo Cosmology and the Parameters of Individual Accomplishment in Things Fall Apart
Eternal Sacred Order versus Conventional Wisdom: A Consideration of Moral Culpability in the Killing of Ikemefuna in Things Fall Apart
"When a Man Fails Alone": A Man and His Chi in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart
How the Center Is Made to Hold in Things Fall Apart
The Metamorphosis of Piety in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart
Problems of Gender and History in the Teaching of Things Fall Apart
Okonkwo and His Mother: Things Fall Apart and Issues of Gender in the Constitution of African Postcolonial Discourse
Fire and Transition in Things Fall Apart
Realism, Criticism, and the Disguises of Both: A Reading of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart with an Evaluation of the Criticism Relating to It
An Interview with Chinua Achebe
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