The Sacred Door and Other Stories

The Sacred Door and Other Stories

Author: Juliana Makuchi Abbenyi-Nfah

Publisher: Ohio University Press

Published: 2007-12-01

Total Pages: 231

ISBN-13: 0896804585

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The Sacred Door and Other Stories: Cameroon Folktales of the Beba offers readers a selection of folktales infused with riddles, proverbs, songs, myths, and legends, using various narrative techniques that capture the vibrancy of Beba oral traditions. Makuchi retells the stories that she heard at home when she was growing up in her native Cameroon. The collection of thirty-four folktales of the Beba showcases a wide variety of stories that capture the richness and complexities of an agrarian society’s oral literature and traditions. Revenge, greed, and deception are among the themes that frame the story lines in both new and familiar ways. In the title story, a poor man finds himself elevated to king. The condition for his continued success is that he not open the sacred door. This tale of temptation, similar to the story of Pandora’s box, concludes with the question, “What would you have done?” Makuchi relates the stories her mother told her so that readers can make connections between African and North American oral narrative traditions. These tales reinforce the commonalities of our human experiences without discounting our differences.


Your Madness, Not Mine

Your Madness, Not Mine

Author: Juliana Makuchi Abbenyi-Nfah

Publisher: Ohio University Press

Published: 1999-02-28

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13: 0896804356

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Women’s writing in Cameroon has so far been dominated by Francophone writers. The short stories in this collection represent the yearnings and vision of an Anglophone woman, who writes both as a Cameroonian and as a woman whose life has been shaped by the minority status her people occupy within the nation-state. The stories in Your Madness, Not Mine are about postcolonial Cameroon, but especially about Cameroonian women, who probe their day-to-day experiences of survival and empowerment as they deal with gender oppression: from patriarchal expectations to the malaise of maldevelopment, unemployment, and the attraction of the West for young Cameroonians. Makuchi has given us powerful portraits of the people of postcolonial Africa in the so-called global village who too often go unseen and unheard.


The Sacred Door

The Sacred Door

Author: Kimberly Beecher

Publisher:

Published: 2021-06-10

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781737408406

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Ever wanted the worry, stress, and self-doubt to just stop? The mind can be an unruly place, rapidly churning from one problem to the next in random and dictatorial ways, even for Latter-day Saints. These tendencies do not have to rule the day, however. The Sacred Door offers transformational truths, training exercises, and a new way of relating to our natural mind, showing us how to rest our mind in Jesus Christ and find stillness in His nourishing presence. What exercise does for the body, skilled mindfulness practice does for the brain--this book delivers the spiritual aspects of mindfulness for gaining the "firm mind" that "feasts on God's love forever."


Beyond the Sacred Page

Beyond the Sacred Page

Author: Jack Cavanaugh

Publisher: Zondervan Publishing Company

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 9780310215752

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This stand-alone novel in the four-part Book of Books series presents the people and the events that brought the Bible into the English language. These historical novels are told in high drama, but with great respect for God's Word and for the courageous people who translated it.


Children's Literature & Story-telling

Children's Literature & Story-telling

Author: Ernest Emenyo̲nu

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 1847011322

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Contributors analyse the theories behind children's literature, its functions and cultural significance, and suggest the new directions this literature is taking in terms of its craft, themes and intentions.


Bearing Witness

Bearing Witness

Author: Joyce Ashuntantang

Publisher: Spears Media Press

Published: 2020-06-01

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13:

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Bearing Witness: Poems from a Land in Turmoil is a poetic response to the devastating Anglophone Crisis/Ambazonian Conflict in Cameroon that has killed thousands of children, women and men, displaced over half a million people and left hundreds of communities in ruins. The poems in this volume capture an all-encompassing landscape marked by alienation, despair, displacement, loss, anger, trauma, as well as courage, hope, heroism, justice and resilience. These poems also engender psychic healing which has the potential of turning victims into survivors. With over 100 poems by 73 poets—seasoned and emerging, old and young, men and women—this collection is not only a guidepost of collective memory, but also the definitive literary work of this period in Cameroon’s checkered history.


The Routledge Companion to International Children's Literature

The Routledge Companion to International Children's Literature

Author: John Stephens

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-09-11

Total Pages: 948

ISBN-13: 1317676068

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Demonstrating the aesthetic, cultural, political and intellectual diversity of children’s literature across the globe, The Routledge Companion to International Children’s Literature is the first volume of its kind to focus on the undervisited regions of the world. With particular focus on Asia, Africa and Latin America, the collection raises awareness of children’s literature and related media as they exist in large regions of the world to which ‘mainstream’ European and North American scholarship pays very little attention. Sections cover: • Concepts and theories • Historical contexts and national identity • Cultural forms and children’s texts • Traditional story and adaptation • Picture books across the majority world • Trends in children’s and young adult literatures. Exposition of the literary, cultural and historical contexts in which children’s literature is produced, together with an exploration of intersections between these literatures and more extensively researched areas, will enhance access and understanding for a large range of international readers. The essays offer an ideal introduction for those newly approaching literature for children in specific areas, looking for new insights and interdisciplinary perspectives, or interested in directions for future scholarship.


27 Views of Charlotte

27 Views of Charlotte

Author: Mark de Castrique

Publisher: Eno Publishers

Published: 2015-01-07

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 0989609200

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27 VIEWS of CHARLOTTE: The Queen City in Prose & Poetry is an anthology of the city known for banking, trees, diversity, and sports. Journalists, novelists, poets, and essayists offer a broad and varied picture of life, present and past, in the legendary Southern city—from a history of the city’s stint as capital of the Confederacy, to a deeply personal essay about integrating restaurants during the civil rights era, to reflections on contemporary Charlotte’s overwhelming growth and New South reputation. Authors appreciate Charlotte’s diversity and vitality, tout its vibrant arts and food scenes, and praise surging Uptown. Yet they don’t shy away from its ongoing struggles: cultural, political, and economic. The views create a literary montage of Charlotte, reflecting its social, historic, and creative fabric.


27 Views of Raleigh

27 Views of Raleigh

Author: Margaret Maron

Publisher: Eno Publishers

Published: 2013-09-10

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 0983247560

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27 VIEWS of RALEIGH: The City of Oaks in Prose & Poetry features the work of twenty-seven (plus two) Raleighites who create a literary montage of North Carolina's capital city in fiction, essays, and poetry. Novelists, poets, essayists, journalists, and even a science fiction writer capture the city in a variety of genres—spanning neighborhoods, generations, cultural and racial experiences, historic eras—reflecting the social, historic, and creative fabric of Raleigh. As Wilton Barnhardt writes in the book's introduction, “We seem to have flourished not because we have solved all the problems of the New South, despite leading the way now and again, but because we the citizens of Raleigh decided to be erudite, cultured, enriched, and entertained . . ."


New Daughters of Africa

New Daughters of Africa

Author: Various Authors

Publisher: Random House

Published: 2022-08-25

Total Pages: 798

ISBN-13: 0241997011

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Nearly three decades after her pioneering anthology, Daughters of Africa, Margaret Busby curates an extraordinary collection of contemporary writing by 200 women writers of African descent, including Zadie Smith, Bernardine Evaristo and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. A glorious portrayal of the richness and range of African women's voices, this major international book brings together their achievements across a wealth of genres. From Antigua to Zimbabwe and Angola to the USA, overlooked artists of the past join key figures, popular contemporaries and emerging writers in paying tribute to the heritage that unites them, the strong links that endure from generation to generation, and their common obstacles around issues of race, gender and class. Bold and insightful, brilliant in its intimacy and universality, this landmark anthology honours the talents of African daughters and the inspiring legacy that connects them-and all of us.