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Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts. / Baker, Charlotte.
Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa: Narratives of Change. ed. / Charlotte Baker; Elvis Imafidon. Oxford: Peter Lang, 2022. p. 37-59.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Baker, C 2022, Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts. in C Baker & E Imafidon (eds), Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa: Narratives of Change. Peter Lang, Oxford, pp. 37-59. <https://new.peterlang.com/institutions/ins-5128157/book/isbn/9781800791404>

APA

Baker, C. (2022). Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts. In C. Baker, & E. Imafidon (Eds.), Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa: Narratives of Change (pp. 37-59). Peter Lang. https://new.peterlang.com/institutions/ins-5128157/book/isbn/9781800791404

Vancouver

Baker C. Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts. In Baker C, Imafidon E, editors, Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa: Narratives of Change. Oxford: Peter Lang. 2022. p. 37-59

Author

Baker, Charlotte. / Literature as Advocacy : Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts. Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa: Narratives of Change. editor / Charlotte Baker ; Elvis Imafidon. Oxford : Peter Lang, 2022. pp. 37-59

Bibtex

@inbook{951fb64d5a1346229d9e9caf833ab25c,
title = "Literature as Advocacy: Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts",
abstract = "This chapter considers changing representations of albinism in literary works by African writers published in the late 20th and early 21st century. It explores the role of these contemporary fictional representations in promoting greater understanding of albinism, asking to what extent they can be considered examples of a literary form of advocacy that counters misunderstandings, beliefs and stereotypes by nuancing understandings with the capacity to bring about social change. Albinism is an attractive and compelling subject for writers, and characters with albinism are frequently found in contemporary literary representation. Their portrayal reveals that the visible difference of people with albinism, the complex socio-cultural realities that shape their lives, and the narratives attached to albinism in Africa in the form of myths, beliefs and stereotypes provide stimulating material with which creative writers can work. The literary representations of albinism I discuss here are, for the most part, inspired to differing extents by the challenges faced by people with albinism and a concern with the importance of civic responsibility. Some are rooted in personal experience, while others draw on testimony, observation or media reporting, but they all, in different ways, draw the reader{\textquoteright}s attention to the complexities of living with albinism. This chapter traces shifting tendencies in the portrayal of albinism in African literary fiction, before focusing on recent literary works by Eveline Mankou, Demilade Adeyemi and Unathi Magubeni, which highlight human rights abuses against people with albinism, and those by Meg Vandermerwe and Pettina Gappah, which portray the multidimensionality of living with albinism.",
author = "Charlotte Baker",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
day = "8",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781800791411",
pages = "37--59",
editor = "Charlotte Baker and Elvis Imafidon",
booktitle = "Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa",
publisher = "Peter Lang",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Literature as Advocacy

T2 - Fictional Representations of Albinism in African Contexts

AU - Baker, Charlotte

PY - 2022/12/8

Y1 - 2022/12/8

N2 - This chapter considers changing representations of albinism in literary works by African writers published in the late 20th and early 21st century. It explores the role of these contemporary fictional representations in promoting greater understanding of albinism, asking to what extent they can be considered examples of a literary form of advocacy that counters misunderstandings, beliefs and stereotypes by nuancing understandings with the capacity to bring about social change. Albinism is an attractive and compelling subject for writers, and characters with albinism are frequently found in contemporary literary representation. Their portrayal reveals that the visible difference of people with albinism, the complex socio-cultural realities that shape their lives, and the narratives attached to albinism in Africa in the form of myths, beliefs and stereotypes provide stimulating material with which creative writers can work. The literary representations of albinism I discuss here are, for the most part, inspired to differing extents by the challenges faced by people with albinism and a concern with the importance of civic responsibility. Some are rooted in personal experience, while others draw on testimony, observation or media reporting, but they all, in different ways, draw the reader’s attention to the complexities of living with albinism. This chapter traces shifting tendencies in the portrayal of albinism in African literary fiction, before focusing on recent literary works by Eveline Mankou, Demilade Adeyemi and Unathi Magubeni, which highlight human rights abuses against people with albinism, and those by Meg Vandermerwe and Pettina Gappah, which portray the multidimensionality of living with albinism.

AB - This chapter considers changing representations of albinism in literary works by African writers published in the late 20th and early 21st century. It explores the role of these contemporary fictional representations in promoting greater understanding of albinism, asking to what extent they can be considered examples of a literary form of advocacy that counters misunderstandings, beliefs and stereotypes by nuancing understandings with the capacity to bring about social change. Albinism is an attractive and compelling subject for writers, and characters with albinism are frequently found in contemporary literary representation. Their portrayal reveals that the visible difference of people with albinism, the complex socio-cultural realities that shape their lives, and the narratives attached to albinism in Africa in the form of myths, beliefs and stereotypes provide stimulating material with which creative writers can work. The literary representations of albinism I discuss here are, for the most part, inspired to differing extents by the challenges faced by people with albinism and a concern with the importance of civic responsibility. Some are rooted in personal experience, while others draw on testimony, observation or media reporting, but they all, in different ways, draw the reader’s attention to the complexities of living with albinism. This chapter traces shifting tendencies in the portrayal of albinism in African literary fiction, before focusing on recent literary works by Eveline Mankou, Demilade Adeyemi and Unathi Magubeni, which highlight human rights abuses against people with albinism, and those by Meg Vandermerwe and Pettina Gappah, which portray the multidimensionality of living with albinism.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781800791411

SP - 37

EP - 59

BT - Cultural Representations of Albinism in Africa

A2 - Baker, Charlotte

A2 - Imafidon, Elvis

PB - Peter Lang

CY - Oxford

ER -