Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction

Nigerian literature, like other literatures, is a product of her history and the social issues which influence it. Colonialism may have come, and can be said to be gone as it was practised in the 1880s to the 1960s, but its effects are great and have lasted especially on the establishment and transf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Juliet Tenshak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lasting Impressions Press 2015-05-01
Series:International Journal of English Language and Translation Studies
Subjects:
SAP
Online Access:http://eltsjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/4-3-2-151.pdf
id doaj-faa7e78de91a4faf8379c236e17f31ba
record_format Article
spelling doaj-faa7e78de91a4faf8379c236e17f31ba2020-11-25T01:46:07ZengLasting Impressions PressInternational Journal of English Language and Translation Studies2308-54602308-54602015-05-0103023341Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian FictionJuliet Tenshak 0Division of Languages and Literature School of Arts and Humanities University of Stirling, UKNigerian literature, like other literatures, is a product of her history and the social issues which influence it. Colonialism may have come, and can be said to be gone as it was practised in the 1880s to the 1960s, but its effects are great and have lasted especially on the establishment and transformation of the literary culture of the African continent. Contemporary Nigerian writing, especially its prose fiction, addresses two main issues: the negotiation of a contemporary identity, and an expression of a general disillusionment with post-colonial Nigeria. Interwoven in the writings of contemporary Nigerian writers is an engagement with the perception and reality of the effects of the World Bank/IMF sponsored Structural Adjustment Programme of the mid-80s to the late 90s on the populace. This paper explores the SAP phenomenon as reflected in the writings of selected contemporary Nigerian novelists, with a view to identifying these writers’ perception of this experience that has and is still affecting Nigeria’s socio-cultural, political, economic and historical landscape. This investigation, through a general synopsis of selected contemporary Nigerian prose fiction, examines how the implementation of this policy facilitated an increase in the military government’s repressive attitude and the escalation of the economic crisis that was being experienced at the time. http://eltsjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/4-3-2-151.pdfRealityPerceptionSAPContemporary Nigerian Fiction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliet Tenshak
spellingShingle Juliet Tenshak
Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
International Journal of English Language and Translation Studies
Reality
Perception
SAP
Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
author_facet Juliet Tenshak
author_sort Juliet Tenshak
title Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
title_short Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
title_full Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
title_fullStr Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
title_full_unstemmed Popular Perception Social Reality: The SAP Experience in Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
title_sort popular perception social reality: the sap experience in contemporary nigerian fiction
publisher Lasting Impressions Press
series International Journal of English Language and Translation Studies
issn 2308-5460
2308-5460
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Nigerian literature, like other literatures, is a product of her history and the social issues which influence it. Colonialism may have come, and can be said to be gone as it was practised in the 1880s to the 1960s, but its effects are great and have lasted especially on the establishment and transformation of the literary culture of the African continent. Contemporary Nigerian writing, especially its prose fiction, addresses two main issues: the negotiation of a contemporary identity, and an expression of a general disillusionment with post-colonial Nigeria. Interwoven in the writings of contemporary Nigerian writers is an engagement with the perception and reality of the effects of the World Bank/IMF sponsored Structural Adjustment Programme of the mid-80s to the late 90s on the populace. This paper explores the SAP phenomenon as reflected in the writings of selected contemporary Nigerian novelists, with a view to identifying these writers’ perception of this experience that has and is still affecting Nigeria’s socio-cultural, political, economic and historical landscape. This investigation, through a general synopsis of selected contemporary Nigerian prose fiction, examines how the implementation of this policy facilitated an increase in the military government’s repressive attitude and the escalation of the economic crisis that was being experienced at the time.
topic Reality
Perception
SAP
Contemporary Nigerian Fiction
url http://eltsjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/4-3-2-151.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT juliettenshak popularperceptionsocialrealitythesapexperienceincontemporarynigerianfiction
_version_ 1725020868409556992