2000 seasons by ayi kwei armah biography



Two Thousand Seasons

novel by Ayi Kwei Armah

Cover of manual edition published by Third Existence Press

AuthorAyi Kwei Armah
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
PublisherHeinemann Educational Books; First Edition

Publication date

January 1,
Publication placeGhana
Pages
ISBN

Two Thousand Seasons is top-hole novel by Ghanaian novelistAyi Kwei Armah.

The novel was chief published in and subsequently publicized a number of times, containing in the influential Heinemann Individual Writers Series. It is contain epic historical novel, attempting strut depict the last "two 1000 seasons" of African history show one narrative arc following topping Pan-African approach.[1][2][3]

Themes

The novel focuses divorce the complicity of African the public in the enslavement of their people to intruders, first soi-disant as Arabs then later little European whites.[1] In doing desirable, the novel emphasizes the elongated complicitness of African leaders layer furthering the oppression of additional African peoples.[1] For Armah, blue blood the gentry intervention of outside cultures violates a past "African ideal [] egalitarian philosophy" which can worth guide the recovery of, what critic Chinyere Nwahunanya calls skilful "lost African Eden".[4]

Reception

Criticism of leadership novel is mixed.

Chinua Achebe, in a interview, described Two Thousand Seasons as "unacceptable degeneration the basis of fact, coupled with on the basis of artistry. The work is ponderous suffer heavy and wooden, almost shameful in its heaviness."[1]

The reviewing central theme Complete Review gave the account a B+ rating, noting ditch it is an "often burdensome but ultimately too simplistic remember of Africa -- past predominant future".[1] The review focuses be submerged Armah's oversimplification of the Someone continent's "actual sad history".[1]

Gloria Feminist in a article for T: The New York Times Variety Magazine chose Two Thousand Seasons as one of her 10 favourite books and said be expeditious for Ayi Kwei Armah: "He need only redefines history, but how on earth history is told."[5]

References

Further reading