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 | | This leads her eventually to the claim that “colonialism is a state of mind”— which is true after all, but not in the terminal way which releases the critic from the obligation to address the other things involved that also desperately call for attention. |
 | | Like Head, though in different ways, he saw in exile a means of recouping creativity; hut, his almost exclusive preoccupation with protest accounts for the powerful anger, anguish, even despair his writing expresses over violations by the system of apartheid, his inability to act for change, his frustration. |
 | | Johnson also comments on David Diop, the African writer, who was able to go even further, letting his revolutionary ardour push his poetry, under a norm of humanising values, to the absolute limits of uncompromising, action-directed protest. |
| courses.nus.edu.sg /course/ellthumb/site/doc/36.html (7648 words) |
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