University Press of America
Pages: 188
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7618-5121-9 • Paperback • September 2010 • $46.99 • (£36.00)
Ikenna Dieke earned his Ph.D. in English at the Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. He is the author of two books and numerous articles. Currently, Dieke is a professor of Africana at the University of Arizona.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Allegory and the Literary Imagination
Part 2 AFRICA
Chapter 3 1. Bessie Head's Maru: Existential Allegory, Pathology of Difference, and the Quest for Conscience
Chapter 4 2. Masada as Symbol in Season of Anomy
Chapter 5 3. Soyinka: From the Failed Narcissus to Heroic Orphism
Chapter 6 4. Awoonor, Okigbo, and Soyinka: Nostos, Symbolism, and Prima Donnas
Part 7 AFRICAN AMERICA
Chapter 8 5. Baraka, Marquis de Sade, and the Individual Will
Chapter 9 6. Baraka and the Allegoric Meaning of the Tragic Spirit
Chapter 10 7. Baraka, America, and the Allegory of Racial Sin
Chapter 11 8. Gwendolyn Brook's Maud Martha: Narrative as Allegory of Initiation
Part 12 GENERAL
Chapter 13 9. Redemptive Fantasy and Allegory of the Endtime
Part 14 CARIBBEAN
Chapter 15 10. A Cosmic Postulate of Eros: Reading Harris's Palace of the Peacock
Chapter 16 11. A Woman Transfigured: Reading Derek Walcott and Wilson Harris
Chapter 17 Notes
Chapter 18 Selected Bibliography
Chapter 19 Index