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Christianity and the African Counter-Discourse in Achebe and Beti: Cultures in Dialogue, Contest and Conflict goes beyond the existing clichés about the operations of the European Christian missionaries and opens alternative ways to read the chain of missionary-native African, and missionary-European colonists relationships.
Sommario
ContentsLIST OF ABBREVIATIONSACKNOWLEDGEMENTSPREFACEINTRODUCTIONCHAPTER 1: COVERING ACHEBE AND BETI IN AFRICAN LITERATURECHAPTER 2: CHRISTIAN MISSIONARIES TAKE ROOT IN WEST AFRICACHAPTER 3: THE INFLUENCES OF CHRISTIANITY AND MISSIONARIES ON ACHEBE AND BETIAchebe and Beti Appropriate European ValuesCHAPTER 4: READING ACHEBE AND BETI IN LIGHT OF POSTCOLONIAL THEORYCHAPTER 5: MISSIONARY PORTRAYALS IN THE NOVELS BY ACHEBE AND BETICHAPTER 6: THINGS FALL APART AND ARROW OF GODLocal InformantsAffirmative Missionary ImagesArrow of GodLocal InformantsAdvantages Coming with MissionariesCHAPTER 7: THE POOR CHRIST OF BOMBA AND KING LAZARUSIn the Mission: Native AfricansPositive Missionary Images, and Father Drumont's Self-ConfrontationKing LazarusImitating the White ManPositive Missionary Portrayals and ParadoxesCONCLUSIONComparative Evaluation ofthe Christian Missionaries in the Selected AuthorsThe Counter-Discourse Against Missionary and Colonial DiscoursesBIBLIOGRAPHY
Info autore
Ali Yi¿it is an Assistant Professor of English at the Department of Western Languages and Literatures, K¿rklareli University, Turkey. He was born in Kahramanmarä, Turkey. He holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from Fatih University, Turkey. His research interests include but not limited to: Literatures in English, postcolonial studies, eco-criticism, literary and cultural theories, and popular culture. He has recently published "Nowhere at Ease: Listening to Syrian Refugee Trauma in Christy Lefteri's The Beekeeper of Aleppo (2019)" in Journal of European Studies, and "Reflections on Kenya's Economic Impasses: Ng¿g¿ wa Thiong'o's Matigari and Wizard of the Crow" in Research in African Literatures (2022).