CHOICE
Ogede (North Carolina Central Univ.) revisits ideas he explored in previous books on Chinua Achebe and Ayi Kwei Armah—Achebe and the Politics of Representation (2001); Ayi Kwei Armah, Radical Iconoclast (CH, Jul'01, 38-6007)—and extends them by pairing these writers and others in order to study different kinds of literary influence. Though the relatively brief chapter on the thematic and stylistic affinities between Achebe's No Longer at Ease and Bessie Head's Maru is somewhat strained, chapters on Flora Nwapa's recasting of Cyprian Ekwensi's Jagua Nana in One Is Enough and on Okinba Launko's and Chimalum Nwankwo's appropriations of Christopher Okigbo's Labyrinths offer informed close readings, as Ogede brings to bear a formidable knowledge of the social, political, and historical forces at work during the periods in which these texts were written....With the emergence of so many young African writers who are consciously acknowledging their debts to their literary forebears, this book is a timely reminder of an ongoing pan-African literary dialogue. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
Choice
Ogede (North Carolina Central Univ.) revisits ideas he explored in previous books on Chinua Achebe and Ayi Kwei Armah—Achebe and the Politics of Representation (2001); Ayi Kwei Armah, Radical Iconoclast (CH, Jul'01, 38-6007)—and extends them by pairing these writers and others in order to study different kinds of literary influence. Though the relatively brief chapter on the thematic and stylistic affinities between Achebe's No Longer at Ease and Bessie Head's Maru is somewhat strained, chapters on Flora Nwapa's recasting of Cyprian Ekwensi's Jagua Nana in One Is Enough and on Okinba Launko's and Chimalum Nwankwo's appropriations of Christopher Okigbo's Labyrinths offer informed close readings, as Ogede brings to bear a formidable knowledge of the social, political, and historical forces at work during the periods in which these texts were written....With the emergence of so many young African writers who are consciously acknowledging their debts to their literary forebears, this book is a timely reminder of an ongoing pan-African literary dialogue. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
Project Muse
Ode Ogede challenges the persistent belief that most African writers look exclusively to European literature for stylistic and narrative models. He demonstrates that African writers are avid readers and imitators of other African writers. Following Ogede’s argument and detailed examples, we are able to see African writing as a dialogue among African writers crossing regional, ethnic, gender, and linguistic divides…. Looking Inward is in fact a forward-looking study through which Ogede has pointed out a significant new direction for African literary history and criticism.
Obi Maduakor
Dr. Ogede's elegantly written book applauds intertextuality as a resourceful creative principle and a rewarding critical enterprise, and authoritatively applies its paradigm to his reading of contemporary African letters, thus proving his thesis that African writers deliberately re-write and revise one another's work as a strategy to frame a new brand of textual originality. His exciting study discusses writers that have made a breakthrough by writing back to established canons: Nigerian author, Flora Nwapa, answering back to Cyprian Ekwensi's Jagua Nana in her novel, One Is Enough; the Ghanaian writer, Ayi Kwei Armah, to Chinua Achebe's A Man of the People in his first novel, The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born; and the South African writer, Bessie Head, offering her novel, Maru, as a revisionist version of Achebe's No Longer at Ease (even if unconsciously), while younger Nigerian poets, such as Chimalum Nwankwo and Okinba Launko, could hardly rid their creative minds of the haunting ghost of the celebrated Nigerian poet, Christopher Okigbo. Dr. Ogede offers intertextual creativity as a way forward for the prospective writer, now that African writing seems to have burnt out its energy in the interrogation of the West and the exploration of race. An eminently enthralling piece of scholarship.