Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy

This article assesses the evolving Kiswahili poetry aesthetics and argues that the art is an African prodigy. It evaluates the arguments of both the conservatives and the liberals in the debate and asserts that the identities which the two camps tend to front are tenuous considering that they stradd...

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Main Authors: Nabea, Wendo, Ngugi, Pamela
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Unisa Press 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479
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spelling ftunisafricaojs:oai:unisapressjournals.co.za/oai:article/15479 2023-12-31T10:04:31+01:00 Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy Nabea, Wendo Ngugi, Pamela 2012-06-01 application/pdf https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479 eng eng Unisa Press https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479/7473 https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479 Copyright (c) 2012 JLS/TLW http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 Journal of Literary Studies; Vol. 28 No. 2 (2012); 16 pages 1753-5387 0256-4718 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2012 ftunisafricaojs 2023-12-05T01:32:00Z This article assesses the evolving Kiswahili poetry aesthetics and argues that the art is an African prodigy. It evaluates the arguments of both the conservatives and the liberals in the debate and asserts that the identities which the two camps tend to front are tenuous considering that they straddle the general and the specific. Based on the constructionist theory, the artide analyses the standpoints of the con­servatives and the liberals in the debate and contends that they reveal three subsets of identities: the Swahili, the Africans and the universal. The artide unearths the various methods that have been employed to ascribe Kiswahili poetry to such identities and argues that they mainly derive from some generalised and unstable postulations - facets such as historical epochs, orality and literacy, geography, language, literature, social class, religion and gender. By referring to the same facets, while also taking into account Kiswahili's poetry medium of dissemination, its authors and consumers, functionality, aesthetics and locality, the article asserts thatthe art is after all an African genius. Opsomming In hierdie artikel word die ontwikkeling van die Kiswahili poetiese estetika geevalueer en word aangevoer dat dit 'n Afrika-wonder is. Die argumente van die konserwatiewes en die liberales in die debat word beoordeel en daar word beweer dat die identiteite wat die twee kampe voorhou aanvegbaar is omdat hulle sowel die algemene as die spesifieke omvat. Al die standpunte van die konserwatiewes en die liberales in die debat word op grond van die konstruksieteorie ontleed, en daar word aangevoer dat hulle op drie subidentiteitsgroepe berus, naamlik die Swahili, die Afrikane en die universele. In die artikel word verskeie metodes blootgele waar­volgens die Kiswahili-digkuns aan sodanige identiteite toegeskryf word. Daar word aangetoon dat hulle grotendeels op veralgemenings en ongegronde veronder­stellings berus - ender meer historiese tydvak, oraliteit, geletterdheid, geografie, taal, letterkunde, stand, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Artide Unisa Press Journals (University of South Africa)
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collection Unisa Press Journals (University of South Africa)
op_collection_id ftunisafricaojs
language English
description This article assesses the evolving Kiswahili poetry aesthetics and argues that the art is an African prodigy. It evaluates the arguments of both the conservatives and the liberals in the debate and asserts that the identities which the two camps tend to front are tenuous considering that they straddle the general and the specific. Based on the constructionist theory, the artide analyses the standpoints of the con­servatives and the liberals in the debate and contends that they reveal three subsets of identities: the Swahili, the Africans and the universal. The artide unearths the various methods that have been employed to ascribe Kiswahili poetry to such identities and argues that they mainly derive from some generalised and unstable postulations - facets such as historical epochs, orality and literacy, geography, language, literature, social class, religion and gender. By referring to the same facets, while also taking into account Kiswahili's poetry medium of dissemination, its authors and consumers, functionality, aesthetics and locality, the article asserts thatthe art is after all an African genius. Opsomming In hierdie artikel word die ontwikkeling van die Kiswahili poetiese estetika geevalueer en word aangevoer dat dit 'n Afrika-wonder is. Die argumente van die konserwatiewes en die liberales in die debat word beoordeel en daar word beweer dat die identiteite wat die twee kampe voorhou aanvegbaar is omdat hulle sowel die algemene as die spesifieke omvat. Al die standpunte van die konserwatiewes en die liberales in die debat word op grond van die konstruksieteorie ontleed, en daar word aangevoer dat hulle op drie subidentiteitsgroepe berus, naamlik die Swahili, die Afrikane en die universele. In die artikel word verskeie metodes blootgele waar­volgens die Kiswahili-digkuns aan sodanige identiteite toegeskryf word. Daar word aangetoon dat hulle grotendeels op veralgemenings en ongegronde veronder­stellings berus - ender meer historiese tydvak, oraliteit, geletterdheid, geografie, taal, letterkunde, stand, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nabea, Wendo
Ngugi, Pamela
spellingShingle Nabea, Wendo
Ngugi, Pamela
Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
author_facet Nabea, Wendo
Ngugi, Pamela
author_sort Nabea, Wendo
title Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
title_short Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
title_full Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
title_fullStr Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
title_full_unstemmed Kiswahili Poetic Aesthetics: From the General Identities to the African Prodigy
title_sort kiswahili poetic aesthetics: from the general identities to the african prodigy
publisher Unisa Press
publishDate 2012
url https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479
genre Artide
genre_facet Artide
op_source Journal of Literary Studies; Vol. 28 No. 2 (2012); 16 pages
1753-5387
0256-4718
op_relation https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479/7473
https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/15479
op_rights Copyright (c) 2012 JLS/TLW
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0
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