"Authoritative, comprehensive, and very readable, this eminently significant study reflects exacting and thorough scholarship, direct contact with African writers and scholars, and masterful treatment of a very complex subject. Bjornson, editor of Research in African Literatures and coeditor of Africa and the West (CH, Jun'86), here exposes and explains historically the problem inherent in applying the concept of nationor nationhood to a grouping of African ethnic cultures within certain territorial limits as a result of colonial conquest—as is the case of Cameroon. In Cameroon, the problem is further complicated since a united Cameroon includes both former British and former French colonies and languages. Bjornson shows that a national consciousness can develop through shared systems of reference, which a literate culture provides. From the colonial period through independence to the present, writers are studied in the context of the political, historical, and social experience of the Cameroonians. Detailed and perceptive analyses of works by authors such as Mongo Beti, Ferdinand Oyono, Benjamin Matip, Francis Bebey, and René (Rene) Philombe reveal the relationship of writers to the current situation and their dominant concerns: freedom and identity. This is a major work in the study of African national literatures, written in a style marked by clarity, continuity, insight, and a sympathetic, understanding approach. It includes a preface, an introduction, maps, notes, and index. A must for undergraduate, graduate, and public libraries."—M. H. Nachtsheim, The College of St. Catherine, Choice , September 1991"Authoritative, comprehensive, and very readable, this eminently significant study reflects exacting and thorough scholarship, direct contact with African writers and scholars, and masterful treatment of a very complex subject. . . . This is a major work in the study of African national literatures, written in a style marked by clarity, continuity, insight, and a sympathetic, understanding approach. September 1991"—Choice
Authoritative, comprehensive, and very readable, this eminently significant study reflects exacting and thorough scholarship, direct contact with African writers and scholars, and masterful treatment of a very complex subject. Bjornson, editor of Research in African Literatures and coeditor of Africa and the West (CH, Jun'86), here exposes and explains historically the problem inherent in applying the concept of nation or nationhood to a grouping of African ethnic cultures within certain territorial limits as a result of colonial conquest—as is the case of Cameroon. In Cameroon, the problem is further complicated since a united Cameroon includes both former British and former French colonies and languages. Bjornson shows that a national consciousness can develop through shared systems of reference, which a literate culture provides. From the colonial period through independence to the present, writers are studied in the context of the political, historical, and social experience of the Cameroonians. Detailed and perceptive analyses of works by authors such as Mongo Beti, Ferdinand Oyono, Benjamin Matip, Francis Bebey, and René (Rene) Philombe reveal the relationship of writers to the current situation and their dominant concerns: freedom and identity. This is a major work in the study of African national literatures, written in a style marked by clarity, continuity, insight, and a sympathetic, understanding approach. It includes a preface, an introduction, maps, notes, and index. A must for undergraduate, graduate, and public libraries.
Choice - M. H. Nachtsheim
Authoritative, comprehensive, and very readable, this eminently significant study reflects exacting and thorough scholarship, direct contact with African writers and scholars, and masterful treatment of a very complex subject. . . . This is a major work in the study of African national literatures, written in a style marked by clarity, continuity, insight, and a sympathetic, understanding approach. September 1991
Authoritative, comprehensive, and very readable, this eminently significant study reflects exacting and thorough scholarship, direct contact with African writers and scholars, and masterful treatment of a very complex subject. Bjornson, editor of Research in African Literatures and coeditor of Africa and the West (CH, Jun'86), here exposes and explains historically the problem inherent in applying the concept of nation or nationhood to a grouping of African ethnic cultures within certain territorial limits as a result of colonial conquestas is the case of Cameroon. In Cameroon, the problem is further complicated since a united Cameroon includes both former British and former French colonies and languages. Bjornson shows that a national consciousness can develop through shared systems of reference, which a literate culture provides. From the colonial period through independence to the present, writers are studied in the context of the political, historical, and social experience of the Cameroonians. Detailed and perceptive analyses of works by authors such as Mongo Beti, Ferdinand Oyono, Benjamin Matip, Francis Bebey, and René (Rene) Philombe reveal the relationship of writers to the current situation and their dominant concerns: freedom and identity. This is a major work in the study of African national literatures, written in a style marked by clarity, continuity, insight, and a sympathetic, understanding approach. It includes a preface, an introduction, maps, notes, and index. A must for undergraduate, graduate, and public libraries.
Choice - M. H. Nachtsheim]]>