Analysis of Chinua Achebe's An Image of Africa

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A01=Clare Clarke
academic analysis of Heart of Darkness
achebe
Achebe's Argument
Achebe's Criticism
Achebe's Essay
Achebe's View
Achebe's Work
achebes
Achebe’s Argument
Achebe’s Essay
Achebe’s View
Achebe’s Work
African Characters
African representation
Author_Clare Clarke
Category=D
Category=GTM
Category=JNZ
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Cedric Watts
chinua
Chinua Achebe
colonial narrative critique
Colonial Nigeria
Colonialist Attitudes
conrad
Conrad Criticism
conrad's
Conrad's Attitudes
Conrad's Heart
Conrad's Views
Conrad's Work
Conrad’s Attitudes
Conrad’s Heart
Conrad’s Views
Conrad’s Work
Critical Consensus
English literature studies
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
essay
Fundamental Questioning
heart
imperial discourse analysis
joseph
Living
Main
NBC
North
Peter Nazareth
Postcolonial Criticism
postcolonial literary criticism
race and literature
Thoroughgoing Racist
Western Canon
work

Product details

  • ISBN 9781912302802
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Macat International Limited
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Few works of scholarship have so comprehensively recast an existing debate as Chinua Achebe’s essay on Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. Achebe – a highly distinguished Nigerian novelist and university teacher – looked with fresh eyes at a novel that was set in Africa, but in which Africans appear only as onlookers or as indistinguishable "savages". Dismissing the prevailing portrayal of Joseph Conrad as a liberal hero whose anti-imperialist views insulated him from significant criticism, Achebe re-cast the Polish author as a "bloody racist" in an analysis so cogent it changed the way in which his discipline looked not only at Conrad, but also at all works with settings indicative of racial conflict.

The creative contribution of Achebe’s essay lies in delving far beneath the surface of Conrad’s novel; he not only generated new and highly influential hypotheses about the author's modes of thought and motivations, but also redefined the entire debate over Heart of Darkness. Just because the novel had been accepted into the "canon", and now falls into the class of “permanent literature”, Achebe says, does not mean we should not question it closely – or criticize its author.

Dr Clare Clarke holds a PhD in English Literature from Queen's University Belfast, specialising in Victorian Literature. She currently teaches Nineteenth-Century Literature at Trinity College Dublin.

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