Abstract
This article reflects on what it might mean to decolonize practical criticism in the current moment by considering previous responses to the same imperative. It discusses critical and institutional interventions by Ngugı wa Thiong’o, Mervyn Morris, Chidi Amuta, and, more recently, Harry Garuba and Benge Okot. In this way, the article demonstrates that the antidote to colonial paradigms of literary criticism has not been a pedagogy that prioritizes context over text but a critical practice oriented to a work’s formal and technical context of intelligibility. Such a practice demands that readers inhabit the literary constraints and possibilities encountered by postcolonial or otherwise peripheral writers.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 227-236 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | English: Journal of the English Association |
Volume | 70 |
Issue number | 270 |
Publication status | Published - 2021 |