APPEALING TO THE MUSE AS EUROPEANISATION OF AFRICAN CREATIVITY: A DECOLONISATIONTHEORYONCREATIVEPOTENCYOFAFRICANCOSMOS
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Abstract
Abstract
This study is a critical survey explores the conventional practice in African Literary criticism. It
revisits the general phrase ‘appeal to the Muse’ to designates the situation when a writer goes
into trance as a way of evoking inspiration. However, this study maintains that continued
designation of an African writer’s slip into trance as ‘appealing to the Muse’ is a retention and
sustenance of European vestiges in Africa. This is a contravention of the goals of African
Consciousness Campaign as expressed in the concept of Africanity and the de-Europeanisation
of the African worldview.The study id anchored on the avant-garde principle which encourages
an interrogation of existing truth, convention or extant practices. This is to expand the frontiers
of knowledge. The qualitative model is employed in carrying out the research. It is posited in the
study that since the Muse is Occidental, the dominance of the influence he commands in the
pantheon in fertilising the inspirational and imaginative undertaking cannot be universal. This is
particularly so that many African writers have been identified with their godheads in the African
cosmos.In specifics, Wole Soyinka identifies with Ogun in Yoruba pantheon while Nawal el
Saadawi romances Isis in the Egyptian transcendental world.To this end, the decolonisation
agenda in Africa should not exclude the phrase ‘appeal to the Muse’ in literary criticism.Each
writer should appeal to what he or she holds in spiritual awe in the creative process. This is the
reflection of the existing realities in the critiquing of the African worldview in the context of
cultural metaphysical cosmogony.
Keywords: Literary Criticism, Muse, De-Europeanisation, Africanity, Isis
