Dissent as an Aesthetic Trope in Modern African Literature: Social, Racial, and Political Confrontation

Abstract

This paper examines the deployment of dissent as an aesthetic trope for social, racial, and political confrontation in modern African literature. Through a close interrogation of the various socio-political indices that have impacted on the lives of the blacks in South African social space during the Apartheid regime, the paper evaluates Peter Abraham’s and Alan Paton’s resolve to stand for the dislocated black masses, taken a critical sentiment that runs counter to earliest traditions that derive their artistic bearing from western canons. Having looked at some of the historical and socio-political antecedents as well as the ideological moorings that birthed Apartheid literature, the paper attempts an evaluation of the writers’ resort to the praxis of dissent in their novels in a quest for justice and fair play in South Africa, and indeed, the African social space. Their adoption of the confrontational technique of dissent adumbrates the perspective under which the papper domiciled critical discourse as well as assessed the writers’ desire for positive change in the society. In other words, since the writers’ mission is to interrogate issues that concern the masses, they ensure that their novels are accessible to the people. The sociological approach to literature is used to evaluate the themes of racial discrimination and resistance in selected novels.The paper concludes that African writer uses his/her work to engage socio-political and cultural issues of his society as well as record them in a manner that the audience would want to react positively or negatively to the issues raised.

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Literary Humanities

KEYWORDS

Dissent, Aesthetics, Trope, Modern African Literature, Racial Discrimination, Apartheid, Sociological

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