Autor: 
Naomi McLeod
Director: 
Prof. Nigel Dennis
Editorial/Institución editora: 
University of St Andrews
Ciudad: 
Fife, Escocia
Año: 
2012
Tipo de publicación: 
Tesis
Tipo de tesis: 
Tesis doctorales
Materias de especialidad: 
Descripción: 

Examina la obra de José Fernando Siale Djangany, Maximiliano Ncogo, Juan-Tomás Avila Laurel y Joaquín Mbomio Bacheng. Equatorial Guinea is the only former Spanish colony in Africa south of the Sahara. Consequently, the Spanish-language literature produced by its authors has been resistant to classification in both the fields of Hispanic and African literary studies. This thesis examines a selection of contemporary narratives written between 1994 and 2007 by the following authors: José Fernando Siale Djangany, Maximiliano Nkogo Esono, Juan Tomás Ávila Laurel and Joaquín Mbomio Bacheng. My main objective in this dissertation is to identify, explain and relate the ways in which post-independence authors express identity in their respective texts. In order to accomplish this task, this thesis posits situational interactions as the key sites for identity expression. Developed from the tenets of symbolic interactionism, the syncretic theoretical model of identity views it as telescopic. It is expected that, through the examination of the chosen texts, a contribution can be made to the understanding of the way in which each author expresses identity and can therefore feed into the larger discussion of identity in Equatorial Guinean narrative.


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16/06/2016 Publicaciones