Overview
Wole Soyinka, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature and one of the
foremost living African writers, here analyses the interconnecting
worlds of myth, ritual and literature in Africa. The ways in which the
African world perceives itself as a cultural entity, and the differences
between its essential unity of experience and literary form and the
sense of division pervading Western literature, are just some of the
issues addressed. The centrality of ritual gives drama a prominent place
in Soyinka's discussion, but he deals in equally illuminating ways with
contemporary poetry and fiction.
Above all, the fascinating
insights in this book serve to highlight the importance of African
criticism in addition to the literary and cultural achievements which
are the subject of its penetrating analysis.