Black River: An account of Christmas Preacher, a slave freed
The PhD comprises a creative component (novel) and critical component (exegesis), and comes out of a desire to fill both a literal and a symbolic gap in the researcher's family history. The novel, Black River, is in magical realist mode and models elements of Idoma ethnic belief into the slave...
Main Author: | Ojabo, Idoko (Author) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Mountfort, Paul (Contributor), Adam, Pip (Contributor), George, James (Contributor) |
Format: | Others |
Published: |
Auckland University of Technology,
2018-06-29T04:35:36Z.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Similar Items
-
'She has her country marks very conspicuous in the face' : African culture and community in early Georgia /
by: Simpson, Tiwanna Michelle
Published: (2003) -
12 Years A Slave: Solomon Northup & The Fugitive Slave Act of 1793
by: Mayo-Bobee, Dinah
Published: (2014) -
Indian Slaves from Caribana: Trade and Labor in the Seventeenth-Century Caribbean
by: Arena, Carolyn Marie
Published: (2017) -
The South Carolina Slave code
by: Ormond, Rosemary L.
Published: (1970) -
Slaves, Ships, and Citizenship: Congressional Response to the Coastwise Slave Trade and Status of Slaves on the High Seas, 1830-1842
by: Green, Barbara Layenette, 1950-
Published: (1975)