A Half-Year Inventory Of Achievements
Do you know that time is a myth? That it is a crazy concept and nothing but a huge conspiracy? […]
A Half-Year Inventory Of Achievements Read Post »
Do you know that time is a myth? That it is a crazy concept and nothing but a huge conspiracy? […]
A Half-Year Inventory Of Achievements Read Post »
The matter of race is a strange one. On one hand, we are told there is no such thing as
What Am I: On Race, Identity and Belonging Read Post »
When you research topics under African fiction, you’re bound to come across the term ‘Negritude’. After a few brushes with
Crash Course On Negritude: Movement, Ideology and Its Immortality Read Post »
I cannot quite remember if her name was Mrs. Hajara or Mrs. Hassana, but I know her son, Abdulrasheed, was
A Reflection on Writing African Fiction in Indigenous Languages Read Post »
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is a literary legend known for her thought-provoking and beautiful prose. Purple Hibiscus, Half of a Yellow
Feminism In African Fiction Using Chimamanda’s Works Read Post »
Blogging is difficult. I have eyebags that won’t go away! Oh, I wish I could say it is all rainbows
Because Blogging Is Hard But I Might Like The Challenge Read Post »
Broken: Not A Halal Love Story by Fatima Bala is a story about faith, love and the persistent reach for salvation even when broken.
Your Eid Mubarak Reading: Broken by Fatima Bala Read Post »
These books, and many more, highlight the struggles of women (and men) in childless marriages and ask that you (the society or relatives) lay off these people. Their childlessness doesn’t take years off your lifespan, neither will them having a baby add years to it. But your undue pressures and damaging comments will take something from them.
The Portrayal of Childless Women in African Fiction Read Post »
Although humour is agreed to be a universal phenomenon, it is also culture-specific, and hence cannot be neatly packaged into
Humour In Contemporary African Fiction Read Post »
Canonically autistic characters are characters who are explicitly identified by the author or within the storyverse as having autism. Autistic-coded characters are characters who exhibit autistic traits but are not explicitly identified as autistic.
A View on the Representation of Autism in the African Fiction Space Read Post »