ABSTRACT
Literary
creativity usually conforms to the tradition of the era in which it is created.
That is why creative styles have changed from the classical, to the Medieval,
through to the Elizabethan Age, the Restoration Age, the Augustan Age, and the
Victorian Age when Realist literature thrived and so on. The question however
is that with the passage of every successive age does it mean such literary
tradition is gone forever? This is what motivated the researcher into research
using Half of a Yellow Sun and Sunset in Biafra for the investigation
of Realism. Realism as we know is a 19th century theory. The
question therefore was, could this theory still be applicable to these modern
literary works of art? Despite the fact
that Half of a Yellow and Sunset in Biafra are 21st and
20th century novels respectively, both novels show glaringly
features of realism through themes, settings, characterisations, use of
language and other literary devices, despite the time difference. This shows
that, despite the fact that realism is no longer trending, writers need not
ceased to present literary works in realist mode, as these two authors have
done. This injunction is applicable not only to novels but to all literary
genres.
1.1 Background to the Study
English literature as we know it
today has passed through series of historical epochs which have in turn conditioned
and defined the nature of literature that is produced at any given point in
time. “A good novelist observes his society, incidents and situations around
him very closely and based on his observation, he creates his own story...
creative writing is a form of self expression. The writer can get his germinal
idea from an incident and develops (sic) it into a story” (NOUN, 59). It is
based on this that it is possible to use the general characteristic of the
incidents captured in the creative works of a given era to define the period in
question.
During the medieval period when
English history and literature commenced, the literature was essentially oral.
This type of literature according to NOUN “...is spoken imaginative
communication that is not written but transmitted through the word of mouth for
entertainment and sometimes edification of the audience... preserved and
transmitted from one generation to the other in that form” (17). This was one
feature of medieval English literature. But aside from being oral, the
literature was dominated by the church to the extent that all creativity was
tailored at promoting Christianity. Preoccupations other than this were frowned
upon as vanity. According to Shmoop (paragraph, 3), medieval English literature
refers to works that were produced in England from about the fall of the Roman
Empire to the invention of the printing press in the 15th century.
So we are talking of the end of the classical period, when people flitted
around in togas, to the renaissance, when women flitted around in cumbersome
Elizabethan attire and manly men wore tights (Shmpoo, paragraph, 3).
From the medieval era and its oral
literature there was largely religiously inclined, English literature moved
into the renaissance era simply defined as rebirth of classical culture. This
was when writers of the era were researching into ancient Greek and Roman
culture and bringing them back to life through their works. Works of scholars
like Plato and Aristotle were unearthed from classical traditions and given
prominence. That is why writers of the Renaissance Era like Shakespeare,
Christopher Marlowe and John Denne came to prominence for tailoring their works
to classical traditions. Put roughly from the 14th to 17th
centuries, the literature characterising this era also known as Elizabethan era
is referred to as renaissance literature whose main feature is the
reintroduction of the literary principles of the classical era.
The upheavals that characterised the
renaissance particularly the civil wars that finally culminated in the
restoration of the King Charles II on May 8, 1660 as King of England, Scotland
and Ireland led to yet another literary era known as the Romantic Era.
Romanticism is described as literature taking place roughly between 1770 and
1848. It was the revolt of the senses or passions against the intellect and the
individual against the consensus. It began as a revolt against established
views, but eventually became the established outlook (Merriam Webster, paragraph
1). Among the features of romanticism were interest in the common man and
childhood, strong senses of emotions and feelings, awe of nature, celebration
of the individual and importance of imagination (Merriam Webster, para.2).
These were all reflected in the literary creativity of the period.
Coming at the heels of the Romantic
Age was the Victorian Age during which realism as a form of literary expression
was born. The movement roughly comprises the years from 1830 to 1900 the name
given to the period is from the royal matriarch of England, Queen Victoria, who
sat on the throne from 1837 to 1901. One has difficulty determining with any
accuracy where the Romantic Movement of the earlier 19th century
left off and the Victorian Period began because these traditions have so many
aspects in common. Likewise, identifying the point where Victorianism gave way
completely to modernism is no easy task. The Victorian writers exhibited some
well established habits from the previous era, while at the same time pushing
arts and letters in new and interesting directions. It is these new and
interesting dimensions of the realist tradition that this study investigates
using the selected texts.
1.2. Statement of the Problem
As indicated in the above
background, literary creativity usually conforms to the tradition of the era in
which it is created. Haven traced the development of these literary traditions
up to the Victorian Age when realist creativity held sway does not imply that
other literary traditions did not evolve thereafter. For instance, the
Modernist Era came right on the heels of realism and thereafter other eras such
as post modernism, cultural studies and so followed.
The question this research seeks to
answer however is whether or not literature has ceased to be presented in the
realist mode with the passage of the Victorian Age. If it is discovered that
literary creativity has not ceased to be cast in the realist mode despite the
fact that realism is no longer trending, the research work shall attempt to
find out the circumstances that have made it possible for the sustenance of the
realist tenets in the selected novels long after the departure of the Victorian
Age.
1.3 Aims and Objectives
The aim of this research is to
investigate the selected novels based on the realist style of writing. To bring
out realist aesthetics in the selected novels and to find out, to what extent
realist writing is manifested in the novels. Also, to see whether, these novels
imbibed the practice of the earlier eras.
The first objective of doing the
above is to show that indeed literature is not created in a vacuum but on the
contrary, it is the product of a people living in space and time with
experience similar to normal human experiences.
Secondly, the researcher, by
investigating the selected works for tenets of the Victorian Age exemplified in
all realist literature, hopes to show that literature is alive. And since it is
alive, the principle used for its evaluation also cannot be dead and forgotten.
The research shall show that even today or in contemporary society, situations
may exist that would warrant the adoption of earlier forms of critical
standards.
Finally, by studying the realist
dispositions of the selected novels, the research work shall endeavour to
review the benefits of literature written in the realist mode. By so doing, the
researcher believes that the message of the selected novels shall be more
easily discernable by readers of the novels.
TOPIC: REALIST APPRAISAL OF CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE’S HALF OF A YELLOW SUN AND ELECHI AMADI’S SUNSET IN BIAFRA
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 60
Price: 3000 NGN
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