Tim Woods
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Gender, memory, history
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Without seeking to write a complete history of the development of this political consciousness in African women's writing, the author shall examine various case-study examples to articulate how that writing is part of a collective effort to redefine the roles of womanhood. She lists four major areas that need addressing at the crux of modern African feminist theory: first, the development of the canon of African women writers; second, the examination of stereotyped images of women in African literature; third, the study of African women writers and the oral tradition; and, fourth, the study of African women writers and the development of an African female aesthetic. This trajectory is a characteristic feature in African women's writing and, As the author will show in further examples, it coincides with their 'working-through' of the displaced, unintegrated experiences forced upon them by colonialism and patriarchy.

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African pasts

Memory and history in African literatures

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