Sosongo


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Landscaping Postcoloniality. The Dissemination of Cameroon Anglophone Literature


Book Description

This is a foundational text on the production and dissemination of Anglophone Cameroon literature. The Republic of Cameroon is a bilingual country with English and French as the official languages. Ashuntantang shows that the pattern of production and dissemination of Anglophone Cameroon literature is not only framed by the minority status of English and English-speaking Cameroonians within the Republic of Cameroon, but is also a reflection of a postcolonial reality in Africa where mostly African literary texts published by western multi-national corporations are assured wide international accessibility and readership. This book establishes that in spite of these setbacks, Anglophone Cameroon writers have produced a corpus of work that has enriched the genres of prose, poetry and drama, and that these texts deserve a wider readership.




Visions from the Dark World


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A meaty, how-to book for executives, Word From the Top explains fast, simple and painless ways to communicate. It deals with writing, speeches and presentations, meetings and listening skills. Written by a pro with 40 years' experience in corporate communications, it's practical, it's simple and it's fast and easy to read, thanks to a crisp and mildly irreverent style. Word From the Top is written for the chief executive and for everyone who articulates policy, strategy and results on paper or at the podium. With shareholders, analysts, reporters, lawyers, lenders and employees listening, a lot is riding on the executive's ability to communicate. "Read this, Boss. Then get out there and knock em dead."




Sociology of the Ibibio


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Bordered Identities in Language, Literature, and Culture


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Cameroon’s composite state of postcoloniality inevitably burdened it with a linguistic and pedagogic culture that changed the eager student into a centripetal mimic of the colonial imagination. Recent events in the country, especially relating to the Anglophone Problem, have spotlighted the need to revisit this space, which has been over-politicised into what Anglophone Cameroonians see as a state of hypnosis. Given the clash between postcolonial consciousness and the globalizing forces of late capitalism, a necessary meeting point had to be negotiated in linguistic and pedagogic contexts, to (re)affirm the identity problematic in Cameroon, and in the interpretation of colonial voices in literary texts. Bordered Identities in Language, Literature, and Culture: Readings on Cameroon and the Global Space offers a variegated reflection on these issues, and simultaneously responds to increasing demands to re-negotiate identity beyond mega frames of Empire, based on contextual data that combine indigenous and globalising imperatives.