ISBN 9789956727667
Pages 230
Dimensions 229 x 152 mm
Published 2012
Publisher Langaa RPCIG, Cameroon
Format Paperback

Psychological Constructs and the Craft of African Fiction of Yesteryears

Six Studies

by Linus Asong

The novel remains the most popular genre in the African literary landscape. In the very large body of criticism that has been devoted to the craft of African fiction, this very stimulating study of six African novels will hold its own distinctive place for a long while. It brings to African critical thought not only an exceptional acumen of interpretation and analysis, but something much more important to most of the previous serious literary study than mere technical dissection – a keen sense of the experience and imaginative truth that make Asong’s selected African texts living books as well as authentic record of human and moral values. Many of Asong’s perceptions are not only critically shrewd but humanly searching, alert to aesthetic quality and invention. No one interested in creative criticism of African fiction will read this book without finding its approach a challenge to his or her own reading of African fiction, and a stimulus to understanding the growth and enduring richness of the best of the African novel.

The book balances nicely in its choice of three texts in English and three in French, the two dominant colonial languages in Africa South of the Sahara. Even more interesting is the fact that although all the French texts have been translated into English, Asong opts to treat the three in the original language in which they were conceived and executed, a decision which keeps the reader as close as possible to the original idiom.

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Review

“A major stride achieved in this collection is the fact that the author has been able to draw a straight line between the art of renowned African novelists and their more established counterparts of European and American fiction. This is not just a study of African fiction, it is a dissection of the craft of fiction anywhere. Considering the extensive cross references with which he embellishes his analysis. By using psychological constructs so extensively, something that many may have hitherto assumed to be the exclusive reserve of legends of European and American fiction, he ventures into a domain that is astoundingly new in the study of all African literature, thus sending critics of African literature back to the drawing board by providing new weapons for viewing that literature.”

M.V. Dimic, Professor and Chair Department of Comparative Literature, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

About the Author

Linus Asong

Linus Asong was born in the South West Region of Cameroon in 1947. With a combined B.A honours in Education, in 1980 he entered the University of Windsor in Canada whence he graduated with a terminal degree in Creative Writing. He holds an M.A and a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Alberta, in Edmonton Canada, and is presently Associate Professor of Literature and Creative Writing at Ecole Normale Superieure Bambili (University of Yaounde 1). Until his death in July 2012, Asong was a stand-up humorist, a consummate portrait painter, an accomplished literary scholar, and a celebrated prolific writer with over a dozen novels to his credit.

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