African Women Writing Diaspora is one of the emerging books on the critical study of the fictional works of three generations of African women writers whose imaginative creativity has been shaped by their African homeland and African diasporic experiences. In seven chapters, experts in Anglophone and Francophone African literature, literary criticism, and rhetoric present refreshingly engaging and compelling critical narratives of the works of Chimamanda Adichie, Sefi Atta, No Violet Bulawayo, Amma Darko, Yaa Gyasi, Nnedi Okorafor, and Chika Unigwe, who through their transcontinental gaze as diaspora subjects, rooted in multiple identities, cultures, languages and localities, continuously push the boundaries of African literature by creating new frontiers of complex and dynamic diaspora, Afrofuturistic, and fantasy literatures grounded in feminist energies, and arouse critical inquiry into the changing nature of the genre.
The book insightfully presents the intersectionality of race, class, gender, local and global realities that shaped the writers’ and other African women’s diaspora experiences within multicontinental settings and increasing economic, social, and political transformation. It interrogates the complexities of diverse ways of being African in the globalized world through the works of third generation African female writers who negotiate survival, vulnerability, subalternity, subjectivity, marginality, otherness, unfolding multiple sites of cultural hybridity, racial inequality, economic adversity, and other barriers to equality, employment, and legal status; and also (re)present the sophistication, oppositional consciousness, and the agency of African women within Africa and the globe. This is an important contribution to African literature, African Diaspora literature, feminist studies, science-fiction, and literary criticisms.
— Gloria Chuku, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
It is no exaggeration to claim that without women writers there would be no twenty-first century African literature. Indeed, African women writers have held their own not only on the continent, but also on the world stage. Their writing, however, has yet to attract requisite scholarly attention, especially from Africa-descended scholars. African Women Writing Diaspora is a much-needed welcome critical assessment of these works. Central to these women’s writing are their transcultural and transnational connections and identity interrogations, and the articles in this collection do a great job to examine these. I recommend it.
— Chielozona Eze, Northeastern Illinois University; author of Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination: We, Too, Are Humans
African Women Writing Diaspora is enlightening and an exceptional work. It combines and critically analyzes the works of different African female authors to present a holistic view of intersectionality and African women in the diaspora from different countries around the world. [This] is an excellent book.
— African Studies Quarterly