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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "Russell H. Kaschula"

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    Blurred lines in AC Jordan’s novel ingqumbo yeminyanya (the wrath of the ancestors): a literary geography of factual and imaginary spaces
    (Taylor & Francis, 2024) Sebolelo Mokapela; Michael M. Kretzer; Russell H. Kaschula
    This article serves to fill a theoretical lacuna in African language literary scholarship. To date there have been very few literary geographic analyses related to South African literature and there are none that deal with African language literature. The purpose and objective of this article is to apply theoretical aspects of literary geography to an isiXhosa novel, ingqumbo yeminyanya. This novel, written by AC Jordan is perhaps the best known and most widely read and translated novel written in isiXhosa. The authors of this article aim to contribute to postcolonial studies by reading the novel of A.C. Jordan spatially, using Hones’s conceptual framework of the novel as a spatial event, considering the complex relationship between the author, the text, and the readers. The background of the author and the historical circumstances that surround the writing of the novel are also explored to see how Jordan’s own spaces are reflected in the novel through characterization and other techniques. The core focus of the article lies in the descriptions and relationship to real or imaginary or in-between spaces and places in relation to the research question, namely how space and places are depicted in ingqumbo yeminyanya, as part of the spatial event.

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