The Resolutionaries

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As a professional interpreter, Nefert works at conferences where Africa’s rulers meet not to solve the continent’s problems, but to resolve to beg for solutions from past and present masters. She knows that under foreign occupation, Africa’s abundant resources were pillaged in a raw export economy that pauperized Africans to enrich invaders. But it saddens her that, after Independence, African rulers did not choose intelligent technological and industrial paths to prosperity, instead of maintaining the destructive globalizing status quo.

Nefert endures her depression in loneliness, until she gets drawn into a circle of highly skilled friends looking, like her, for a key to an African future. Her spirit lifts as the group’s research uncovers an ancient way of knowledge and creative work, long suppressed during the centuries of foreign oppression, but still accessible to seekers ready to read the oldest of African writings.

Additional information

Weight 0.9 kg
ISBN

9782911928178

Pages

482

Year Published

2013

Format

Paperback

Author Picture

Ayi Kwei Armah

Ayi Kwei Armah, (born 1939, Takoradi, Gold Coast [now Ghana]), Ghanaian novelist whose work deals with corruption and materialism in contemporary Africa.

Armah was educated in local mission schools and at Achimota College before going to the United States in 1959 to complete his secondary education at Groton School and his bachelor’s degree at Harvard University. He thereafter worked as a scriptwriter, translator, and English teacher in Paris, Tanzania, Lesotho, Senegal, and the United States, among other places.

In his first novel, The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (1968), Armah showed his deep concern for greed and political corruption in a newly independent African nation. In his second novel, Fragments (1970), a young Ghanaian returns home after living in the United States and is disillusioned by the Western-inspired materialism and moral decay that he sees around him. The theme of return and disillusionment continued in Why Are We So Blest? (1971), but with a somewhat wider scope. In Two Thousand Seasons (1973) Armah borrowed language from the African dirge and praise song to produce a chronicle of the African past, which is portrayed as having a certain romantic perfection before being destroyed by Arab and European despoilers. The Healers (1979), Armah’s fifth novel, explores a young man’s quest to become a practitioner of traditional medicine while the Asante empire falls to British forces. Armah took an extended break from publishing before releasing Osiris Rising in 1995. The novel examines the struggles of independent Africa and the lingering effects of colonialism. His later books included KMT: In the House of Life (2002) and The Resolutionaries (2013).

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205.00