culture of African people in very bad manner and intentions.

 
There has also been the problem of classification. Some literary writers 
who wrote about Africa were not really Africans. Joyce Cary wrote 
Mister Johnson, a story about Africans and Africa. It was this novel 
which prompted the writing of Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. 
According to Achebe, Mister Johnson contained distorted pictures of the 
African society which he tried to correct in Things Fall Apart. More so, 
Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness is also about Africa and the African 
People. The questions now are: should we call these fictions African 
fiction because they presented Africans? What about the authorship? Is 
African fiction to be written by Africans only? It is true that the present 
form of written fiction in Africa is an offshoot of Western literary 
culture infused in the western education of Africans but is it possible to 
have African fiction in African form that is without any hinge on the 
western form of writing? These are impossibilities since the writers of 
African fictions make use of western style and values in the craft. 
African literature, in its basic form, is oral. So, written literature
To classify Joyce Cary and Joseph Conrad as African writers and to call 
their fictions African fictions becomes a major problem in the polemics 
of definition of African fiction. Fiction is an imaginative recreation of 
real life experiences. This means that the subject matters in every fiction 
must reflect the experiences of the society from which it emanated. One 
very important fact here, being that every fictional work must show 
realism not mere fabrication of unrealities purposely designed to distort 
the history of a people. Chinua Achebe made a proposition that fictional 
works about Africa written by non Africans tend to rewrite the history 
and culture of African people in very bad manner and intentions. 
Herodotus of Halycahasus, one of the early historians gave a distorted 
history of Africa. He described Africa as “a continent of barbarians, and 
animal-like humans with four legs without any form of culture or 
religion” and this historical distortion has often influenced the western 
judgment of Africa and Africans. Hence, we do not expect a better 
fiction from non-Africans about Africa since they already have a  
distorted history about Africa. In defining African fiction, we get stuck 
about the placement of these literatures written by non-Africans about 
Africa. 


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