The conflicts of cultures in the African novels of Chinua Achebe, Cheikh Hamidou Kane and Ferdinand Oyono, 1976
Saber, Ahmed
1970-1979
The conflicts of cultures are one of the most conspicuous elements that dominate the African novel of 1950 and 1960. In Chapter I, Chinua Achebe (of Nigeria) is represented by his early three novels only, Things Fall Apart, No Longer at East and Arrow of God. In these three books, the conflicts are basically cultural. For Achebes main concern is to defend and correct the African cultural image which has been stained and misunderstood as a result of a foreign occupation. In addition, Achebe has dealt with other minor conflicts, such as religion, politics, education, individual and collective conflicts, war, and tribal conflicts. All these elements are carefully handled through characterizations, themes and language. Chapter II deals with Cheikh Hamidou Kane's (of Senegal) only novel, L'Aventure Ambigue. Here the conflicts of cultures are primarily based upon the Islamic teaching that desperately conflicts with the rational and materialistic French system of education. Unlike Achebe, Kane has handled the cultural clashes through a philosophical medium. Chapter III is devoted to the Cameroonian novelist, Ferdinand Oyono. In his novels, Une Vie de Boy, Le Vieux Ngre et La Mdaille and Chemin dEurope, the conflicts of cultures are focused on the hypocrisy of the Christian church and its missionaries, the French officers, and especially the French policy of assimilation. Unlike both Achebe and Kane, Oyono has chosen laughter and satire as a medium for his writing. Despite all of their differences, Achebe, Kane and Oyono have written successful novels out of the conflicts of cultures.
text
application/pdf
1976-03-01
thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Atlanta University
Afro-American Studies
Dorsey, David F.
Clark Atlanta University
Georgia--Atlanta
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/cau.td:1976_saber_ahmed