Veneration and desecration in Calixthe Beyala's La petite fille du réverbère

dc.contributor.authorAsaah, A.H.
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-21T10:56:20Z
dc.date.available2019-03-21T10:56:20Z
dc.date.issued2005-12
dc.description.abstractThe Franco-Cameroonian novelist Calixthe Beyala has, in recent years, made a name for herself as a radical feminist novelist. Her anti-patriarchal and antiestablishment attack lakes on an obsessively sacred coloration in her eighth novel, La petite fille du réverbère, for, while venerating herself, Grandmother, and earth-bound Africa, she systematically desecrates what appears to her as incarnations of the inimical hydra-headed Father: imperialists, negligent genitor, opportunistic fathers, Fathers-of-Nation, sexual taboos, the sky-God, and literary critics who accuse her of plagiarism. Using as a point of departure the notions of the sacred embedded in collective and contemporary consciousness, the essay examines the dual process of sanctification and profanation at work in the novel. © 2005.en_US
dc.identifier.otherVol. 36(4): pp 155-171
dc.identifier.otherDOI: 10.1353/ral.2005.0158
dc.identifier.urihttp://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/28774
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherResearch in African Literaturesen_US
dc.titleVeneration and desecration in Calixthe Beyala's La petite fille du réverbèreen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

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