c5cfac679b Produced by The Johns Hopkins University Press in collaboration with The Milton S. Tags Add tagsfor"Sozaboy : a novel in rotten English". by Mai Palmberg . >a schema:Place ; dcterms:identifier "enk" ;. The E-mail Address(es) you entered is(are) not in a valid format. In many countries where there is no true majority language at all, the very existence of a national literary medium depends on the possibility of translation, so that translatability is not an incidental characteristic of a writer's work but an implicit feature of it from the beginning. You can download a free the book formats.. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.
The Ogoni, according to Saro-Wiwa, have suffered all the devastation brought by the drilling and transportation of oil, without gaining any of the economic benefits, primarily because they have never been powerful enough to figure in the ethnic spoils system by which Nigeria has been governed since its civil war in the 1960s. Cite/Export Cite/Export Copy a citation APA (6th ed.) Chicago (Author-Date, 15th ed.) Harvard (18th ed.) MLA (7th ed.) Turabian (6th ed.) Export a citation Export to RefWorks Export to EndNote / Reference Manager Export to EasyBib Export to EndNote / Reference Manager(non-Latin) Cancel Note: Citations are based on reference standards. 97-112 In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Public Culture 13.1 (2001) 97-112 [Access article in PDF] Ken Saro-Wiwa's Sozaboy: The Politics of "Rotten English" Michael North Translation seems by definition an international issue, and the translatability of a text seems to be relevant only when that text travels outside the national boundaries within which it was created. Find out more here. Sozaboy the Longman African Writers series Ebook Download This title is part of the Longman African Writers series TYPE OF FILE : PDF More Details. Nnolim . Implicitly or explicitly, literary works in countries such as India or Nigeria must always confront internal limits to their intelligibility; in so doing, they also raise larger questions about national self-representation. Pages: Unknown. Series: Longman African writers.
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