Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
First published in France as Le Pagne Noir: Contes Africains in 1955. The writing of such chronicles of an African childhood was the author's way of coming to terms with the questions every sensitive colonized person educated in the Western tradition would sooner or later have to ask: Who am I? Where do I come from? Where am I going? While giving poetic and fictional expression to the tensions of independence and the events that led to it, the writer realized that he would at the same time have to rediscover his oral tradition. It was a natural development of what the new African poetry and drama in French, English, and, later, Portuguese, were already doing--probing the inner mysteries of indigenous mythology and symbolism. Only in this way could the enlightened African restore a sense of equilibrium in his people's culture. From the foreword by Es'kia Mphahlele, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Table of Contents
The mirror of dearth -- The black cloth -- The pitcher -- Spider's hump -- L'enfant terrible -- Spider's ox -- Spider and the tortoise -- Mother iguana's funeral -- The pig's snout -- The hunter and the boa -- The sacred cow -- The bat's relations -- The yam field -- The dowry -- Spider and his son -- The man who wanted to be king -- Other works by Dadie.