Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry

This article examines political dimensions of the train metaphor in selected southern African poems, some of them in English translation. Exploring work by Mongane Serote, B.W. Vilakazi, Demetrius Segooa, Phedi Tlhobolo, Thami Mseleku, Jeremy Cronin, Alan Lennox-Short, Anthony Farmer, Freedom T.V. N...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wright, Laurence
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007453
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-7066
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-70662018-11-20T06:11:55ZThird World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetryWright, LaurenceThis article examines political dimensions of the train metaphor in selected southern African poems, some of them in English translation. Exploring work by Mongane Serote, B.W. Vilakazi, Demetrius Segooa, Phedi Tlhobolo, Thami Mseleku, Jeremy Cronin, Alan Lennox-Short, Anthony Farmer, Freedom T.V. Nyamubaya, Abduraghiem Johnstone and Mondli Gwala, the argument shows some of the ways in which the technological character of trains and railways is made to carry a message of political insurrection and revolution. The author shows that the political potential of the railway metaphor builds on the general response to railways evident in poems indebted to traditional African praise poetry. The piece also demonstrates that political contention within different strands of the southern African liberation movement could also find expression using the railway metaphor.2010textarticle21 pagespdfvital:7066http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007453EnglishLiterator: Journal of literary criticism, comparative linguistics and literary studiesWright, LaurenceUse of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Literator Self-archiving Policy
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description This article examines political dimensions of the train metaphor in selected southern African poems, some of them in English translation. Exploring work by Mongane Serote, B.W. Vilakazi, Demetrius Segooa, Phedi Tlhobolo, Thami Mseleku, Jeremy Cronin, Alan Lennox-Short, Anthony Farmer, Freedom T.V. Nyamubaya, Abduraghiem Johnstone and Mondli Gwala, the argument shows some of the ways in which the technological character of trains and railways is made to carry a message of political insurrection and revolution. The author shows that the political potential of the railway metaphor builds on the general response to railways evident in poems indebted to traditional African praise poetry. The piece also demonstrates that political contention within different strands of the southern African liberation movement could also find expression using the railway metaphor.
author Wright, Laurence
spellingShingle Wright, Laurence
Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
author_facet Wright, Laurence
author_sort Wright, Laurence
title Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
title_short Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
title_full Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
title_fullStr Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
title_full_unstemmed Third World Express: trains and “revolution” in Southern African poetry
title_sort third world express: trains and “revolution” in southern african poetry
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007453
work_keys_str_mv AT wrightlaurence thirdworldexpresstrainsandrevolutioninsouthernafricanpoetry
_version_ 1718796330024828928