Missionary influence on African literary tendencies
The advent of colonialism had far reaching implications in Africa. Western cultural imperialism was, and still is, implemented, inter alia, by the church and its missionary acolytes. Missionaries instilled Eurocentric value systems that were deemed vital for the successful execution of colonization....
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2016
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1500 |
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author | Viriri, Advice |
author_facet | Viriri, Advice |
author_sort | Viriri, Advice |
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description | The advent of colonialism had far reaching implications in Africa. Western cultural imperialism was, and still is, implemented, inter alia, by the church and its missionary acolytes. Missionaries instilled Eurocentric value systems that were deemed vital for the successful execution of colonization. This paper will show that the literary tradition that emerged in Africa was not only intimately linked to Christianity, mission-controlled schools and the presses, but has been circumscribed by the socio-economic and political realities of colonialism. As shall be seen, Africans did not regard Christianity as part of the colonization agenda. Missionaries linked Christian mystical life with literacy hence this investigation examines whether the mythicized African fiction is devoid of any realism at all. |
format | Article |
id | ir-11408-1500 |
institution | My University |
language | English |
publishDate | 2016 |
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spelling | ir-11408-15002022-06-27T13:49:06Z Missionary influence on African literary tendencies Viriri, Advice Missionaries, colonialism Christianity The advent of colonialism had far reaching implications in Africa. Western cultural imperialism was, and still is, implemented, inter alia, by the church and its missionary acolytes. Missionaries instilled Eurocentric value systems that were deemed vital for the successful execution of colonization. This paper will show that the literary tradition that emerged in Africa was not only intimately linked to Christianity, mission-controlled schools and the presses, but has been circumscribed by the socio-economic and political realities of colonialism. As shall be seen, Africans did not regard Christianity as part of the colonization agenda. Missionaries linked Christian mystical life with literacy hence this investigation examines whether the mythicized African fiction is devoid of any realism at all. 2016-06-06T11:30:47Z 2016-06-06T11:30:47Z 2010 Article 0256-6060 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1500 en Latin American Report;Vol. 26, No. 1; p. 4-13 open |
spellingShingle | Missionaries, colonialism Christianity Viriri, Advice Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title | Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title_full | Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title_fullStr | Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title_full_unstemmed | Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title_short | Missionary influence on African literary tendencies |
title_sort | missionary influence on african literary tendencies |
topic | Missionaries, colonialism Christianity |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1500 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT viririadvice missionaryinfluenceonafricanliterarytendencies |