This Earth, My Brother Explained

This Earth, My Brother is a 1971 novel by Ghanaian novelist Kofi Awoonor published. It was later republished by Heinemann as part of the influential African Writers Series.[1]

Development and context

Awoonor started writing the novel in 1963—and it was a "straightforward narrative" which Awoonor compared to works by Conrad and Joyce.[2] Subsequently, Awoonor wrote other sections: original

printing of the novel included two types of printed material: the narrative section, and other sections written after the initial draft. The intermixed narrative strategies radically changed assumptions about what African novels should include.

Author:Kofi Awoonor
Isbn:978-0435901080
Pub Date:January 1, 1972
This earth my brother
Publisher:Heinemann; First Edition (January 1, 1972)
Genre:Poetry
Country:Ghana
Language:English
Pages:183

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In Ghana, this novel echoes many of the obsessive qualities of the author's poems. The story describes the pain of Awoonor's voluntary exile and his spiritual return to his native land.[3]

Academic Kwame Ayivor describes the novel as a fictional representation of the mythology and worldview of the Ewe people.[4] Ayivor describes the style of using this material, as very similar to Ayi Kwei Armah's The Healers (1979).

Critical reception

In an orbituary for Awoonor, Ghanaian-British writer Nii Ayikwei Parkes called the novel "wonderfully musical prose, its immersion in Accra's history, its obvious confidence in its place in the world, made me go to my father and ask about the other uncle."[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kofi Awoonor: This Earth My Brother - Vanguard News. 2013-09-28. Vanguard News. en-US. 2016-06-17.
  2. Duclos. Jocelyn-Robert. 1975-01-01. "The Butterfly and the Pile of Manure": A Study of Kofi Awoonor's Novel, This Earth, My Brother. 484138. Canadian Journal of African Studies. 9. 3. 511–521. 10.2307/484138.
  3. Web site: This Earth, My Brother . 2024-05-05 . Goodreads . en.
  4. Ayivor. Kwame. 1999. The Prodigal Hero Returns to his Aboriginal Home: A Reading of Kofi Awoonor's This Earth, My Brother. Alternation. 6. 2.
  5. Web site: My hero: Kofi Awoonor by Nii Parkes. Parkes. Nii. 2013-09-28. The Guardian. 2016-06-17.