Ken Saro-Wiwa -- Theme and Subject
The Confluence of Religion and Economic Class in "The Overhaul"
Dukana Fetes the the Sanitary Inspector
Death in Saro-Wiwa's
A Forest of Flowers
: Reading Questions
Duzia's Funeral Oration for Adda
Modernization, Education, and Oil in Saro-Wiwa's "Night Ride"
Fertility, Infertility, and Failure in "The Divorcee"
Marriage, Men, and Women's Lives in "The Divorcee"
The Pleasures of Aba
Robert's Employer: The Inpenetrable Barrier of Poverty
Robert Begins to Hate "Bingy"
The Role of the Nigerian Women in
Anthills of the Savannah
and "Home Sweet Home"
Sira and the Position of Women in "Home, Sweet Home,"
Time and Change in Dukana
Limited Perception in
Sozaboy
Traditional Greed or Imported Capitalism in A
Forest of Flowers
The Theme of Language in Recent African Novels
Post-colonial Residue
(Defining the Term and the Problem of Language)
A Forest of Flowers
and Postcolonial Gender Questions
Confronting America's Inanimate Presence (II):
A Forest of Flowers