Ngugi Wa Thiong'o (Contemporary World Writers MUP)
Book Details
Author(s)Patrick Williams
PublisherManchester University Press
ISBN / ASIN0719047315
ISBN-139780719047312
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,739,306
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Ngugi is one of the most important novelists on the contemporary world stage, and someone whose name has for many become synonymous with cultural controversy and political struggle.
Patrick William's lucid analysis offers the most up-to-date study of Ngugi's writing, including his most rcent collection of essays. Focusing on important aspects of Ngugi's work which critics have hitherto ignored, and drawing on a wide range of relevant theoretical perspectives, this study examines the growing complexity of Ngugi's accounts of the history of colonised and post-colonial Kenya. The cultural and anti-imperial politics on Ngugi's experimentation with language and form in both novel and drama is discussed, including the important role of culture as a source of historical memory and strategies of resistance for oppressed groups.
All the novels and the major plays are studies in detail, and in addition a substantial chapter examines Ngugi's contribution in the area of non-fiction. This has become an increasingly important aspect of his work in recent years, and he has become almost as well known for Decolonising the Mind and its controversial championing of the use of indigenous languages as for his novels.
Patrick William's lucid analysis offers the most up-to-date study of Ngugi's writing, including his most rcent collection of essays. Focusing on important aspects of Ngugi's work which critics have hitherto ignored, and drawing on a wide range of relevant theoretical perspectives, this study examines the growing complexity of Ngugi's accounts of the history of colonised and post-colonial Kenya. The cultural and anti-imperial politics on Ngugi's experimentation with language and form in both novel and drama is discussed, including the important role of culture as a source of historical memory and strategies of resistance for oppressed groups.
All the novels and the major plays are studies in detail, and in addition a substantial chapter examines Ngugi's contribution in the area of non-fiction. This has become an increasingly important aspect of his work in recent years, and he has become almost as well known for Decolonising the Mind and its controversial championing of the use of indigenous languages as for his novels.

