Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Five Nights with Omenka by Chukwuemeka Godswill

COMING SOON IN 2013!

Another book by Chukwuemeka Godswill

Book Title: Five Nights with Omenka
Author: Chukwuemeka Godswill
Genre: A Novel (Literature)
Language: English
ISBN:
Publisher:
Place of Publication:
Number of Pages:







      EXCERPTS FROM FIVE NIGHTS WITH OMENKA
www.chuxemlink.blogspot.com

...The warriors gave up. 'Even the ants are against us,' they said. 'No one can defeat the dwarf. We have lost the war.' Then Obike asked for the guns. Obike, he spoke when all hopes were lost, when every Idumala warrior had given up. When the best among the warriors could not face the dwarf of Itimbene, he asked for the guns.

Ofo by Chukwuemeka Godswill


AVAILABLE!

Book Title: f
Author: Chukwuemeka Godswill
Genre: A Play (Literature)
Language: English
ISBN: 978-978-493581-4
Publisher: Maxiprints
Place of Publication: Awka, Anambra State, Nigeria.
Pages: 86

Available at The Department of English and Literary Studies, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, or School of General Studies/Book Shop, Abia State Polytechnic, Aba,  or call 08033582210, 08127773629, 08066625331 or e-mail: chuxem@gmail.com, ebookcataloguemanager@ysghubs.com.




A REVIEW OF ỌFỌ 

             By
Prof. Sunday N. Agwu,
Department of English,
Ebonyi State University, Nigeria

Date of Review: 31st December 2009
www.chuxemlink.blogspot.com 

Monday, August 6, 2012

A STUDY OF THE ORAL PERFORMANCE OF OKPOSI, OHAOZARA IN NIGERIA by Godswill Chukwuemeka


ARTICLE

THE CONCEPTUAL EQUIVALENCE OF LITERATURE IN INDIGENOUS AFRICAN SETTING DEVOID OF ANY CONTACT WITH THE WEST: A STUDY OF THE ORAL PERFORMANCE OF OKPOSI, OHAOZARA IN NIGERIA
                   By
Godswill Chukwuemeka
INTRODUCTION: Is Oral Performance Literature?
            Jim Meyer, in his article, “What is Literature,” made a brilliant effort to present a definition of literature based on prototype. In his use of the prototype approach, he focuses on establishing the meaning of literature via characteristics that are peculiar to it:
I suggest, then, that prototypical literary work:
*are written texts
*are marked by careful use of language, including features such as creative metaphors, well-turned phrases, elegant syntax, rhyme, alliteration meter.
*are in a literary genre (poetry, prose fiction, or drama)
*are read aesthetically
*are intended by the author to be read aesthetically
Contain many implicatures (are deliberately somewhat open in interpretation)
(http://www.und.nodak.edu/dept/linguistics/wp/1997meyer.htm)
I do not have problem with the above yardsticks he outlined for measuring what should be called literature. But the statement that follows, gives me a headache: