The detective story pattern in the shona folktale

This article discusses an aspect of Shona literature that has not been given much scholarly attention, the detective story genre. Although an attempt has been made to explain why perhaps students of literature have not concerned themselves seriously with detective fiction as a genre the major focus...

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Main Author: Chigidi, William L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1811
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author Chigidi, William L.
author_facet Chigidi, William L.
author_sort Chigidi, William L.
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description This article discusses an aspect of Shona literature that has not been given much scholarly attention, the detective story genre. Although an attempt has been made to explain why perhaps students of literature have not concerned themselves seriously with detective fiction as a genre the major focus of the researcher is on discussing the origin of the genre. An effort has been painstakingly made to argue that the modern written Shona detective story has its 'roots' in non-detective traditional shona folktales and not in reading the detective stories written by western authors or in watching western detective dramas on television. A study of the morphology of some folktales reveals the existence of a 'detective' story plot in them. It is argued that the shona traditional folktale is a kind of oral 'detective' story that reflects traditional methods pf solving mysteries or puzzles and that rudimentary forms of the written Shona detective story should therefore be regarded as an extension or expansion of the non-detective traditional folktale
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spelling ir-11408-18112022-06-27T13:49:06Z The detective story pattern in the shona folktale Chigidi, William L. Shona literature This article discusses an aspect of Shona literature that has not been given much scholarly attention, the detective story genre. Although an attempt has been made to explain why perhaps students of literature have not concerned themselves seriously with detective fiction as a genre the major focus of the researcher is on discussing the origin of the genre. An effort has been painstakingly made to argue that the modern written Shona detective story has its 'roots' in non-detective traditional shona folktales and not in reading the detective stories written by western authors or in watching western detective dramas on television. A study of the morphology of some folktales reveals the existence of a 'detective' story plot in them. It is argued that the shona traditional folktale is a kind of oral 'detective' story that reflects traditional methods pf solving mysteries or puzzles and that rudimentary forms of the written Shona detective story should therefore be regarded as an extension or expansion of the non-detective traditional folktale 2016-09-15T13:24:45Z 2016-09-15T13:24:45Z 2004 Article http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1811 en The Dyke;Vol. 1, No. 1; p. 90-97 open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Shona literature
Chigidi, William L.
The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title_full The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title_fullStr The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title_full_unstemmed The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title_short The detective story pattern in the shona folktale
title_sort detective story pattern in the shona folktale
topic Shona literature
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1811
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