Blending Genres in the Palm-Wine Drinkard: Myth, Orality,and the Modernist African Novel
Jennifer Rani, V and Uma Devi, K N (2026) Blending Genres in the Palm-Wine Drinkard: Myth, Orality,and the Modernist African Novel. Contemporaneity of English Language andLiterature in the Robotized Millennium. pp. 22-23. ISSN 2583-7370
Uma.pdf
Download (1MB)
Abstract
2026Keywords:Genre BlendingAfrican NovelMythOralityYoruba FolkloreThis paper examines the dynamic blending of myth, oral tradition, and modernist narrative techniques in ThePalm-Wine Drinkard, positioning the text as a pioneering work in the formation of the African novel. Drawingon the rich reservoir of Yoruba folklore, the novel reconfigures indigenous storytelling modes within a written,English-language framework, thereby challenging Western literary conventions. The study explores howmyth functions not merely as thematic content but as a structural principle that shapes the episodic, cyclicaljourney of the protagonist. It also highlights the influence of orality, evident in repetitive patterns, formulaicexpressions, and communal modes of narration, which disrupt linear plot development and conventional realism.By situating the text within modernist discourse, the paper argues that Tutuola’s narrative resists rigid genreclassifications, instead creating a hybrid literary form that negotiates between tradition and innovation. Thisfusion ultimately redefines the boundaries of the novel and asserts a distinct African aesthetic that privilegescultural memory, performative storytelling, and imaginative freedom.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | English > British Literature |
| Domains: | English |
| Depositing User: | Mr IR Admin |
| Date Deposited: | 13 May 2026 10:44 |
| Last Modified: | 10 Jun 2026 04:28 |
| URI: | https://ir.vistas.ac.in/id/eprint/18254 |
