Chapter Three: The Origin and Development of African Literature in English - Literature in English Form Five - Darasa Huru

Chapter Three: The Origin and Development of African Literature in English – Literature in English Form Five

Chapter Three: The Origin and Development of African Literature in English – Literature in English Form Five

Understanding the origin and development of African literature in English is important as it familiarises learners with the fabric of traditions and conventions of African literature. It also enhances the understanding of various voices, and socio-political, economic, and cultural realities.

Moreover, it enables one to understand the expectations from the continent’s diverse societies that have shaped the body of African literature in English over time. In this chapter, you will learn the relationship between African oral traditions, Western literary conventions and African literature in English.

You will also discuss the contribution of African authors to the development of African literature in English and explore features of pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial African literature using selected literary texts. The competencies developed will enable you to conceptualise and analyse the origin of African literature in English and differentiate it from literary traditions of other continents.

The usefulness of African oral literature in the absence of literacy.

African Oral Traditions

Activity 1

Use online or library materials to answer the following questions:

  1. Explain the concept of African oral traditions.
  2. Discuss characteristics of different African oral traditions materials.
  3. Explain the characteristics of African oral traditions.

Activity 2

Read the following story and answer the questions that follow.

The Man Who Never Lied

Once upon a time there lived a very wise man who never, ever lied. His name was Mamad. Mamad was famous all over the land, far and wide, for his reputation of always telling the truth. The king heard about Mamad and ordered his subjects to bring him to the palace. He looked at the wise man and asked:

“Mamad, is it true, that you have never lied?”

“It’s true.”

“And you will never lie in your life?”

“I will never lie in my life.”

“Okay, tell the truth, but be careful! Lies are cunning! They get on your tongue easily.”

Several days passed and the king called Mamad once again. The king was determined to trick Mamad into lying. With a big crowd gathered all around, the king talked with Mamad as he prepared to go hunting. With one foot in his horse’s stirrup, he ordered Mamad: “Go to my summer palace and tell the queen I will be with her for lunch. Tell her to prepare a big feast. You will have lunch with me then.” Mamad bowed down to the king and then set off to find the queen. The king laughed and said: “We won’t go hunting and now Mamad will lie to the queen. Tomorrow we will laugh on his behalf.” But the wise Mamad went to the palace and said: “Maybe you should prepare a big feast for lunch tomorrow, and maybe you shouldn’t. Maybe the king will come by noon, and maybe he won’t.” “Tell me will he come, or won’t he?” asked the queen. “I don’t know whether he got on his horse or whether he put his left foot on the ground after I left.” Everybody waited for the king. He came the next day and said to the queen: “The wise Mamad, who never lies, lied to you yesterday.” But the queen told him about the words of Mamad. The king realized that the wise man never lies, and says only that, which he saw with his own eyes.

Source: Adopted from https://anikerfoundation.org/african-folktale-the-man-who-never-lied

Questions

  1. Explain the central conflict in the story.
  2. Explain several characteristics of oral tradition exhibited in the story.
  3. Analyse the values or moral lessons obtained from the story.

Activity 3

Collect at least ten proverbs from online or library materials and answer the following questions:

  1. Explain the knowledge and wisdom embedded in each of the proverbs.
  2. Proverbs often use grammatical and rhetorical devices to make them impactful and memorable. Discuss this statement with examples from the proverbs based on the following aspects:
    • (a) Alliteration
    • (b) Rhyme and parallel structure
    • (c) Repetition of keywords or phrases
    • (d) Strong imagery

Activity 4

Read the following extract from The Legend of the Queen of Sheba and answer the questions that follow.

HOW KING SOLOMON BEGAT KING MENELIK.

1. King Menelik’s mother was a Tigre girl named Etiye-Azëb. And [in her days] the Tigre people were worshipping a dragon, and the sacrifice which they brought [to him] was the following: each man among them gave in turn his first-born daughter and an entalam of mead and an entalam of milk to the dragon. 2. Now when the turn of Etiye-Azëb’s parents came, they tied her to a tree for the dragon. And to the place where she was tied to the tree came seven saints and seated themselves there in the shade. 3. And while they were sitting there in the shade, she began to weep, and one of her tears fell upon them. And when [this tear] had fallen upon them, they looked up and beheld her tied there, and they asked her saying: “What art thou? Art thou Mary or a human being?” 4. And she answered them: “I am a human being.” They said to her: “And why art thou bound here?”

Source: Adapted from Littman, E. (1909). Bibliotheca Abessinese. Studies Concerning the Language, Literature and History of Abyssinians. R.J Brill.

Questions

  1. Who are the characters in the extract?
  2. Identify any characteristics of an oral tradition in the extract.
  3. To which class of legends do you think The Legend of the Queen of Sheba belongs? Give reasons for your answer.

Takeaways

Before the coming of whites, the continent of Africa had its oral traditions, a form of communication through which knowledge, art, ideas and cultural materials are generated, received, preserved, and transmitted from one generation to another through speech or song. In the early 20th century, the oral tradition theory emerged to guide the study of this literary tradition popularised by Kenneth Bailey. Based on this theory, oral literature is characterised by additive thought and expressions, orality, aggregative thinking (formula-driven), repetition, flexibility and variation, dynamism, and mnemonic devices for memory. Thus, the current African literature in English is rooted in the interaction between African oral literature and Western literary traditions (oral-literacy interaction). They include folktales, proverbs, riddles, tongue-twisters, fairy tales, legends, myths, epics, songs, oral poems, charms, prayers, and dances.

Western Literary Conventions

Activity 5

Read various online or library materials and explain the concept of Western literary conventions.

Takeaways

Western literary traditions, or European literary traditions, are conventions of Western culture or European civilisations. These literary traditions have a significant influence on the literature, prose, drama and poetry of Western and European countries. Due to colonialism, their influence has extended to African literature.

Ancient Greek and Latin Literature

Activity 6

Read the extract from the epic “The Iliad” by Homer and answer the questions that follow.

THE TRIAL OF THE ARMY, AND CATALOGUE OF THE FORCES

Jupiter, in pursuance of the request of Thetis, sends a deceitful vision to Agamemnon, persuading him to lead the army to battle, in order to make the Greeks sensible of their want of Achilles. The general, who is deluded with the hopes of taking Troy without his assistance, but fears the army was discouraged by his absence, and the late plague, as well as by the length of time, contrives to make trial of their disposition by a stratagem. He first communicates his design to the princes in council, that he would propose a return to the soldiers, and that they should put a stop to them if the proposal was embraced. Then he assembles the whole host, and upon moving for a return to Greece, they unanimously agree to it, and run to prepare the ships. They are detained by the management of Ulysses, who chastises the insolence of Thersites. The assembly is recalled, several speeches made on the occasion, and at length the advice of Nestor followed, which was to make a general muster of the troops, and to divide them into their several nations, before they proceeded to battle. This gives occasion to the poet to enumerate all the forces of the Greeks and Trojans, and in a large catalogue.

The time employed in this book consists not entirely of one day. The scene lies in the Grecian camp, and upon the sea-shore; towards the end it removes to Troy.

Now pleasing sleep had seal’d each mortal eye,
Stretch’d in the tents the Grecian leaders lie:
The immortals slumber’d on their thrones above;
All, but the ever-wakeful eyes of Jove.
To honour Thetis’ son he bends his care,
And plunge the Greeks in all the woes of war:
Then bids an empty phantom rise to sight,
And thus commands the vision of the night.

“Fly hence, deluding Dream! and light as air,
To Agamemnon’s ample tent repair.
Bid him in arms draw forth the embattled train,
Lead all his Grecians to the dusty plain.
Declare, e’en now ’tis given him to destroy
The lofty towers of wide-extended Troy.

Source: Adopted from Homer. (1998). The Iliad. Trans. Robert Fagles. Penguin Books.

Questions

  1. What is the extract about?
  2. What is the socio-economic and political context of the extract?
  3. Identify the specific features that qualify the epic to belong to classical ancient Greek literature.

Takeaways

Ancient Greek Literature

This is the body of writings in the Greek language whose history extends from the 1st millennium BC to the present day. We can divide the history of ancient Greek literature into three periods: Archaic (lasts before the end of the 6th century BC), Classical (5th and 4th centuries BC), and Hellenistic and Greco-Roman (3rd century BC onward). The famous writers of the classical ancient Greek literature were Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. Sophocles is famous for his tragedies about Oedipus, particularly Oedipus the King and Antigone; Euripides is known for Bacchae and Cyclops while Aeschylus wrote The Persians and Prometheus Bound.

Ancient Latin Literature

This literary tradition began and developed through translation from Greek. Latin authors used Greek sources to create their new form of literature around the 3rd century BC. Latin literature includes essays, histories, poems, plays, and other writings written in the Latin language.

Medieval Literature

Activity 7

Read the extract and answer the questions that follow.

GRENDEL THE MURDERER

Grendel attacks the sleeping heroes
When the sun was sunken, he set out to visit
The lofty hall-building, how the Ring-Danes had used it
For beds and benches when the banquet was over.
Then he found there reposing many a noble

Asleep after supper; sorrow the heroes,
Misery knew not. The monster of evil
Greedy and cruel tarried but little,
He drags off thirty of them, and devours them
Fell and frantic, and forced from their slumbers
Thirty of thanemen; thence he departed

Leaping and laughing, his lair to return to,
With surfeit of slaughter sallying homeward.
In the dusk of the dawning, as the day was just breaking,
Was Grendel’s prowess revealed to the warriors:
A cry of agony goes up, when Grendel’s horrible deed is fully realized.
Then, his meal-taking finished, a moan was uplifted,

Source: Adapted from Beowulf An Anglo-Saxon Epic Poem Translated From The Heyne-Socin Text By Lesslie Hall. D. C. Heath & Co.

Questions

  1. Discuss the traits of characters in the extract.
  2. What are the themes portrayed in the literary piece?
  3. Discuss the socio-economic and political context in which the extract was written.
  4. Identify the specific features of Middle Ages Literature found in the extract.

Takeaways

The Medieval period extends from the 5th to the 15th century. This period was also called the Middle or Dark Ages because scholars believed it was between two important periods: the Classical Period and the Renaissance. During this period, covering ca. 450-1450, Britain saw many invasions, unrests, battles and changes that shaped the country into a powerful nation. The medieval period is long and can be divided into three lesser periods: the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, and Middle-English periods. The Western countries produced many verses and prose during this period, but many of these texts were anonymous. Medieval Europe became the cradle of new developing genres. It brought ballads, allegorical poetry, Latin hymns, sacred songs, lullabies, fabliaux, debates, court epics, popular epics, beast epics, tale cycles, chivalric romances, mystery plays, miracle plays, and morality plays. As many of these literary types suggest, a great deal of medieval literature is folk literature, and it is linkable to the oral traditions of bards, jongleurs, and troubadours.

Renaissance Literature

Activity 8

Read the following poem and answer the questions that follow.

Amoretti XXX: My love is like to ice and I to fire

My love is like to ice, and I to fire:
How comes it then that this her cold so great
Is not dissolved through my so hot desire,
But harder grows the more I her entreat?
Or how comes it that my exceeding heat
Is not allayed by her heart-frozen cold,
But that I burn much more in boiling sweat,
And feel my flames augmented manifold?
What more miraculous thing may be told,

That fire, which all things melts, should harden ice,
And ice, which is congeal’d with senseless cold,
Should kindle fire by wonderful device?
Such is the power of love in gentle mind,
That it can alter all the course of kind.

Edmund Spenser

Questions

  1. Explain the characteristics of the Renaissance that are evident in the extract.
  2. Discuss the socio-economic and political context in which the text was written.

Takeaways

Renaissance is a French word denoting “rebirth.” It was a movement developed in Italy in the 14th century and spread throughout Europe, reaching its peak in the 16th century. It came after the medieval era, when European art and literature were revived under the influence of classical models. The characteristics of the Renaissance era were humanism, nationalism and a new approach to life. The Renaissance time made people excited about art, buildings, stories, and learning new things. People started using their own languages more and exploring science. They also rediscovered old Greek and Roman knowledge. This discovery happened because more Europeans could read about ancient times. When Constantinople fell in 1453, many Greek and Roman scholars moved to Europe, making people even more interested in the past. Shakespeare was a famous writer during this time.

Neo-classical Literature

Neo-classicism was a literary and artistic movement from approximately the early 1600s until the late 1700s. It was prevalent across Europe, with some of the most prominent literary trends occurring in England. It focused on imitating aspects of Ancient Greek and Roman art and the literature found in the original Ancient Greek and Roman texts called classical texts. Young artists and writers became increasingly more aware of the artistic cultures of Ancient Greece and Rome and then used them in their art. Neo-classicism differed from the previous Renaissance period as it was against too much use of individualism and imagination in literature. It focused on more universal issues and portrayed humans as much more nuanced and flawed. Neo-classic texts have strict formal order and structure; they focus on and discuss social issues. Neo-classical texts considered humans to be flawed. Thus, in neo-classical texts, characters are flawed and nuanced, just as capable of doing badly as doing good. Ancient Greek and Roman texts thematically focused heavily on displaying logical and sensible viewpoints. This assertion means texts rationalised things by focusing on what is known rather than not.

African Authors and African Literature in English

Activity 18

  1. Read various online or library materials and collect information about influential African literary authors, genres they write and examples of their renowned texts.
  2. Summarise their biographies.

Takeaways

Different scholars explain African literature as a body of traditional oral and written literature(s) in African languages and texts written by Africans in European languages. African literature written in European languages dates primarily from the 20th century onward. It was born primarily in the education systems imposed by colonialism, with models drawn from Europe. However, the African oral traditions exerted their influence on this literature. Some of the African writers across time include Chinua Achebe, Christopher Okigbo, Wole Soyinka, Kofi Awoonor, Ngugi wa Thiongo, Peter Abrahams, Nurrudin Farah, David Rubadiri, Dennis Brutus, Severine Ndunguru, Flora Nwapa, Grace Ogot, Ama Ata Aidoo, Martha Myungi and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. These writers have influenced the literary landscape of Africa, and their outstanding texts have also brought them international acclaim.

The Depiction of Pre-colonial Africa in Pre-colonial and Modern African Literature

Activity 19

  1. Read three pre-colonial literary texts written by Africans.
  2. Investigate the themes portrayed in the three literary texts.
  3. Write short notes on the themes appearing in all three literary texts.

Takeaways

The development of African literature has undergone several stages. The first one was pre-colonial African literature. Pre-colonial African literature is the body of literature produced during and about pre-colonial Africa. This literature includes both oral literature (including prose, short formulaic expressions and poetry) and written narratives. Pre-colonial written literature is also concerned with slave narratives dating from the Atlantic slave trade between the 15th and 19th centuries. Under this period, African literature is said to have gained roots in the writings of slaves who had regained their freedom. Some slaves used their literature to fight back against slavery. They, therefore, published stories expressing their horrific experiences in the yoke of slavery. More so, African literary writings before colonialism are often regarded to include works produced before the advent of colonisation in Africa. Primarily, these works described Africans’ social, political, and economic lives and celebrated their rich and diversified cultures. Authors of this time include Juan Latino, Jacobus Elisa, Phillis Wheatley and Ignatus Sanchos.

When talking about African literature, early European literary texts that depicted Africans, such as Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and H-Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines, cannot be ignored. These texts depicted pre-colonial Africa as a dark continent and its inhabitants uncivilised.

Although it is set in contemporary times, modern African literature also depicts pre-colonial Africa. Also, despite being modern, such literature uses African oral literature. This oeuvre covers all oral literature materials collected and published by modern African writers. Such texts include Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and No Longer at Ease, Flora Nwapa’s Efuru, Grace Ogot’s The Promised Land and Elechi Amadis The Great Ponds.

Exercise 13

  1. With reference to one reading, explain the relevance of pre-colonial literature to modern society.
  2. Discuss the contribution of pre-colonial African literature and its writers to the development of modern African literature in English.

Colonial African Literature

Activity 21

Read various online sources and explain the following concepts in relation to African colonial literature:

  1. Exploitation
  2. Slavery
  3. Oppression
  4. Segregation
  5. Alienation
  6. Nationalism

Takeaways

The literary genres that flourished during the colonial period were poetry, play, and the novel. Colonialism and cultural exchange greatly influenced these genres. Notably, the contact between European colonial powers and Africans created cultural contacts during the colonial era, leading to the exchange of literary ideas and practices. Therefore, literary conventions from the two cultures were introduced into either of the communities through this contact. The marriage between Western and African literary conventions, such as the use of European languages and African literary traditions, enabled literary artists to produce great literary texts. In those texts, Europeans described the land and the people they conquered and occupied, as well as Africa and Africans, from their perspective. On the other hand, Africans who had been exposed to Western languages began to write in those tongues and by employing other Western literary conventions. They mainly wrote to air their experiences and grievances from colonial domination.

The colonial literature written by the colonised utilised the colonial language and literary techniques influenced by European and indigenous traditions, exploring themes related to colonisation, imperialism, and cultural clashes. It depicted the experiences of colonisers and colonised peoples, reflected power dynamics and hierarchies in colonial societies and criticised colonialism and its impact on individuals and societies.

Post-colonial African Literature

Activity 23

  1. With evidence, discuss similar themes portrayed in three selected post-colonial literary texts.
  2. Compare how the three literary texts handle critical issues related to post-colonialism.

Takeaways

Post-colonial African Literature

Post-colonial African literature refers to writings produced in the aftermath of colonialism. Most of this literature oeuvre was written by African authors in their home countries or diaspora. Post-colonial literature deals with colonial experience, decolonisation issues and the disillusionment of independent Africa. Postcolonial literature development is said to have followed the following three phases:

Mimicry and Ambivalence

This phase features writers imitating colonisers’ writing styles while also expressing feelings towards colonial rule. Writers in this phase are concerned with issues of identity, cultural hybridity, and the legacy of colonialism.

Nationalism and Resistance

This phase is introduced by writers who actively engage with themes of nationalism, resistance, and decolonisation to reclaim their cultural heritage, challenge colonial narratives, and affirm their independence.

Globalisation and Hybridity

This phase mainly harbours current literary writings that explore the impact of globalisation, migration, and diaspora on postcolonial societies. Writers in this phase often focus on issues of displacement, identities, and the complexities of living in a globalised world.

Postcolonial African literature is represented in short stories, poems, novels, essays, and plays. Examples of Postcolonial literary texts include Tayeb Salih’s Season of Migration to the North (1966), Ayi Kwei Armah’s The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born (1969), Wole Soyinka’s A Play of Giant (1984), Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s A Grain of Wheat (1967) and Matigari (1986) Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions (1988) as well as Chinua Achebe’s A Man of the People, to mention a few.

Most of the post-colonial literature(s) are devoted to the expression of disillusionment with independent Africa, racism, identity, freedom/independence, change/transformation, colonialism, oppression and nationalism, reformation of identity, neo-colonialism, civil war, and dictatorship.

Assessment Questions

  1. Using one reading done in class, discuss how disillusionment is a common theme in Post-colonial Africa.
  2. With reference to a story about your community (folktale, fairy-tale, legend, or fable) answer the following questions.
    • a) What is the setting of this story?
    • b) Discuss the social events reflected in the narrative.
  3. Compare and contrast between European literary traditions and African literary traditions based on their themes and characters.
  4. How would you agree that Western literary traditions have influenced modern African literature?
  5. How do modern African writers navigate the tension between embracing Western literary forms and structures while also striving to maintain the integrity of their cultural identities and storytelling traditions?
  6. African literature in English is a product of twin heritage. Discuss.

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