B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel

B.W. Vilakazi is rightly famous for his Zulu poems that integrate the Zulu creative genius with established European poetic trends. He was also the creator of the Zulu romantic novel, having written the first three examples of the genre dealing with both personal and national romantic ideals. These...

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Main Author: N.N. Canonici
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2010-07-01
Series:Literator
Subjects:
Online Access:https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/45
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spelling doaj-ff6a3479771a4ad8b455847f77bee3782020-11-25T00:14:46ZafrAOSISLiterator0258-22792219-82372010-07-01312154410.4102/lit.v31i2.4531B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novelN.N. Canonici0School of IsiZulu Studies, University of KwaZulu NatalB.W. Vilakazi is rightly famous for his Zulu poems that integrate the Zulu creative genius with established European poetic trends. He was also the creator of the Zulu romantic novel, having written the first three examples of the genre dealing with both personal and national romantic ideals. These are, however, seldom analysed. This article reflects on the emerging literatures in African languages, their aims, contents and forms. After a general introduction on Vilakazi’s life and innovative approach to creative writing within the context of the African mini-renaissance period of the 1930s, there is a brief exposition of Vilakazi’s vision of an African literature, rooted in the need for self-identification, and recognition of perceived historical greatness. Then each novel is contextualised and analysed, through a description of the characters that exert the greatest influence on the events, since plot and character are also the highest achievement of the folktale, when told by expert performers. An attempt is also made to identify Afro-centric narrative elements and to justify perceived shortcomings in plot construction.https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/45African Elite StoryAfrican RomanticismConverts And TraditionalistsUse Of MagicReusable Past And National IdentityParallel Construction PlotPolygamy
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N.N. Canonici
spellingShingle N.N. Canonici
B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
Literator
African Elite Story
African Romanticism
Converts And Traditionalists
Use Of Magic
Reusable Past And National Identity
Parallel Construction Plot
Polygamy
author_facet N.N. Canonici
author_sort N.N. Canonici
title B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
title_short B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
title_full B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
title_fullStr B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
title_full_unstemmed B.W. Vilakazi and the birth of the Zulu novel
title_sort b.w. vilakazi and the birth of the zulu novel
publisher AOSIS
series Literator
issn 0258-2279
2219-8237
publishDate 2010-07-01
description B.W. Vilakazi is rightly famous for his Zulu poems that integrate the Zulu creative genius with established European poetic trends. He was also the creator of the Zulu romantic novel, having written the first three examples of the genre dealing with both personal and national romantic ideals. These are, however, seldom analysed. This article reflects on the emerging literatures in African languages, their aims, contents and forms. After a general introduction on Vilakazi’s life and innovative approach to creative writing within the context of the African mini-renaissance period of the 1930s, there is a brief exposition of Vilakazi’s vision of an African literature, rooted in the need for self-identification, and recognition of perceived historical greatness. Then each novel is contextualised and analysed, through a description of the characters that exert the greatest influence on the events, since plot and character are also the highest achievement of the folktale, when told by expert performers. An attempt is also made to identify Afro-centric narrative elements and to justify perceived shortcomings in plot construction.
topic African Elite Story
African Romanticism
Converts And Traditionalists
Use Of Magic
Reusable Past And National Identity
Parallel Construction Plot
Polygamy
url https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/45
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