Melancholic women: The intellectual hysteric(s) in Nervous Conditions.Published in:1995By:Nair, SupriyaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Caught at the confluence of history: Ama Ata Aidoo's necessary nationalism.Published in:1995By:Samantrai, RanuPublication type:Literary Criticism
Signifyin(g) the griottes: Flora Nwapa's legacy of (re)vision and voice.Published in:1995By:Umeh, MariePublication type:Literary Criticism
Feminism, rebellious women and cultural boundaries: Rereading Flora Nwapa and her compatriots.Published in:1995By:Nnaemeka, ObiomaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Litterature Francophone--what for?Published in:1995By:Vignonde, Jean-NorbertPublication type:Book Review
Cesaire--the poet and the politician.Published in:1995By:Kesteloot, LilyanPublication type:Literary Criticism
En famille or the problematic of alterity.Published in:1995By:Teko-Agbo, K. AmbroisePublication type:Literary Criticism
The child figures and childhood symbolism in Flora Nwapa's children's fiction.Published in:1995By:Ezenwa-OhaetoPublication type:Literary Criticism
The concept of Mammywater in Flora Nwapa's novels.Published in:1995By:Jell-Bahlsen, SabinePublication type:Literary Criticism
The poetics of economic independence for female empowerment: An interview with Flora Nwapa.Published in:1995By:Umeh, MariePublication type:Interview
The reinvention of woman through conversations and humor in Flora Nwapa's One Is Enough.Published in:1995By:Berrian, Brenda F.Publication type:Literary Criticism
The Igbo word in Flora Nwapa's craft.Published in:1995By:Nwankwo, ChimalumPublication type:Literary Criticism
Introduction: The invalid, dea(r)th, and the author: The case of Flora Nwapa, aka Professor...Published in:1995By:Ogunyemi, Chikwenye OkonjPublication type:Literary Criticism