About the Author:
James Tar Tsaaior is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Mass Media and Writing in the School of Media and Communication, Pan-African University, Lagos, Nigeria where he teaches creative writing, media/cultural studies and postcolonial literature. He is also the Director of Academic Planning of the University and editor of the Journal of Cultural and Media Studies. Between 2010 and 2011, he was a visiting Research Fellow at the Centre of African Studies, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, and a participant in the International Faculty Programme, University of Navarre IESE Business School, Barcelona, Spain.
Review:
"African Literature and the Politics of Culture fearlessly enters the fraught epistemological confrontation between Africa and the West, critically assessing both Afrocentric nativism and European cultural hegemony, and examining ways in which Africa's indigenous forms of knowledge can be productively engaged in the cultural laboratory of a continent in a state of rapid transition. The proposal is timely, the outcome quite challenging for both cultural politics and African literary studies." -Professor Annalisa Oboe, University of Padua, Italy "Engaging with the relationship between oral and printed literatures, with the politics of gender in African literature and with the mutual influence of oral and written genres, James Tsaaior's new book offers a comprehensive appraisal of critical positions to date, and expands these arguments in exciting new directions. The array of primary materials will inspire students of African literature to read beyond the canon." -Professor Stephanie Newell, University of Sussex, United Kingdom "A brilliantly conceived study that transforms our knowledge of the cultural politics of African literature by anchoring it firmly in the dynamic discourses of modernity. Professor Tsaaior has undertaken the formidable task of analysing a large body of oral and written literature from all over Africa (including the often neglected North) to explore the politics of knowledge production from a postcolonial perspective." -Dr Anke Bartels, University of Potsdam, Germany
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.