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This special issue focuses on literary texts by African writers in which the protagonist returns to his/her "original" or ancestral "home" in Africa from other parts of the world. Ideas of return - intentional and actual - have been a consistent feature of the literature of Africa and the African diaspora: from Equiano's autobiography in 1789 to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's 2013 novel Americanah. African literature has represented returnees in a range of locations and dislocations including having a sense of belonging, being alienated in a country they can no longer recognize, or experiencing a multiple sense of place. Contributors, writing on literature from the 1970s to the present, examine the extent to which the original place can be reclaimed with or without renegotiations of "home".
GUEST EDITORS: HELEN COUSINS, Reader in Postcolonial Literature at Newman University, Birmingham, UK; PAULINE DODGSON-KATIYO, Head of English at Newman University, Birmingham, UK.
Series Editor: Ernest Emenyonu is Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Michigan-Flint, USA.
Reviews Editor: Obi Nwakanma
African literature --- Emigration and immigration in literature. --- Return migration in literature. --- History and criticism. --- ALT 34 Diaspora & Returns in Fiction: African Literature Today. --- African authors. --- African diaspora. --- African literature. --- Belonging. --- Guest Editors: Helen Cousins. --- Home. --- Identity. --- Migration. --- Multiple sense of place. --- Pauline Dodgson-Katiyo. --- Protagonist returns. --- Sense of belonging. --- Space. --- diaspora. --- homeland. --- identity. --- literary returns. --- migration.
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