"The combination of the words ’language’ and ’Anglophone African literatures’ generally brings to mind an aesthetic based on the use of proverbs and phrases borrowed from the writers’ mother
tongues. Such culturally specific features also characterize Nigerian fiction - but can this rich literary tradition really be reduced to its reliance on local languages and folklore? Answering
this question in the negative, this book claims that the analysis of style in Nigerian fiction needs to be broadened to account for the range of linguistic techniques deployed by contemporary
writers. Drawing on the discipline of stylistics, this study introduces a series of methodological tools to demonstrate how sustained attention to form can foster understanding of content in
selected works by some of the most widely celebrated Nigerian writers of recent times - Chris Abani, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Uzodinma Iweala and Ben Okri. Among the key issues addressed are
the link between style and characterization, the interplaybetween aesthetics and ideology, and the relationship between language and representation. These different thematic approaches converge
to suggest that, while the cultural specificity of Nigerian fiction cannot - and should not - be ignored, this body ofworks also needs to be freed from the straightjacket of critical and
disciplinary orthodoxy that has too often restricted its interpretation. This book’s interdisciplinary approach serves as an exciting template for future research into African and postcolonial
literatures more broadly"--