Category Archives: Pieter Verhoven

ON AFRICAN LITERATURE & WORLD LITERATURE–A DIALOGUE FROM SPIRITUS MUNDI, NOVEL BY ROBERT SHEPPARD

  Note: The following is a Dialogue on African Literature and World Literature taking place in Midrand, South Africa, the site of the meeting of the Pan-African Parliament of the African Union (AU), amoung several renown African Writers, Scholars and … Continue reading

Posted in A, Achebe, African & World Literature, African Culture, African Literature, African Tradition, African Union, African Writers, Aimee Cesaire, Archetypes, Archetypes in Literature, Ba, Best New American Novels, Best New American Voices, Best New American Writers and Novelists, Best New Contemporary Political Novels, Best New English Novels, Best New Epic Novels, Best New Fantasy Novels, Best New Futurist Novels, Best New Global Novels, Best New Literary Novels, Best New Myth Novels, Best New Novel of the Year, Best New Novels of Ideas, Best New Political Novels, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Chinua Achebe, Coetzee, Comparative Literature, Cosmopolitan Civilization, Dionysian, English Language, Evolutionary Biology, Globalization, Globalization of Literature, Greek Tragedy, Kofi Anan, Leopold Senghor, Literary Theory, Nadine Gordimer, Negritude, Ngugi wa Thiongo, Nietzsche, Nietzsche Birth of Tragedy, Obatala, Ogun, Orature and Literature, Pan-African Parliament, Pieter Verhoven, Post-Colonial Literary Theory, Post-Colonial Theory, Post-Colonialism, Religion, Religion and Evolutionary Biology, Religion and Society, Robert Sartorius, Robert Sheppard, Spiritus Mundi Novel by Robert Sheppard, T.S. Eliot, The Apollinian an Dionysian in Literature, The Promethian in Literature, The Transformational in Literature, Tradition and the Individual Talent, Uncategorized, United Nations, United Nations Parlamentary Assembly, United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, Universal Archetypes, Universal Civilization, V.S Naipaul, Vernacular Literature, Western Civilization and African Civilization, Wole Obatala, Wole Soyinka, World and Comparative Literature, World Civilization, World Literature, Writer Interview, Yoruba Religion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment