These are the sources and citations used to research African Fantasy. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Adeyemi, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Adeyemi, T., 2018. Children of blood and bone. London: Macmillan.
In-text: (Beah, 2008)
Your Bibliography: Beah, I., 2008. A long way gone. Winnipeg: Manitoba Education, Media Production Services Unit.
In-text: (Burnett, 2015)
Your Bibliography: Burnett, J., 2015. The Great Change and the Great Book: Nnedi Okorafor's Postcolonial, Post-Apocalyptic Africa and the Promise of Black Speculative Fiction. Research in African Literatures, 46(4), p.133.
In-text: (Butler, 1988)
Your Bibliography: Butler, O., 1988. Kindred. Boston: Beacon Press.
In-text: (Edoro, 2021)
Your Bibliography: Edoro, A., 2021. What is Africanjujuism?. [online] Brittle Paper. Available at: <https://brittlepaper.com/2021/07/what-is-africanjujuism/> [Accessed 24 July 2022].
In-text: (Emecheta, 1985)
Your Bibliography: Emecheta, B., 1985. The rape of Shavi. New York: G. Braziller.
In-text: (Iweala, 2005)
Your Bibliography: Iweala, U., 2005. Beasts of no nation. Harper Perennial.
In-text: (Rodney, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Rodney, W., 2018. How Europe underdeveloped Africa. London: Verso.
In-text: (Rutledge, 2001)
Your Bibliography: Rutledge, G., 2001. Futurist Fiction & Fantasy: The Racial Establishment. Callaloo, 24(1), pp.236-252.
In-text: (Soyinka, 2006)
Your Bibliography: Soyinka, W., 2006. Myth, literature and the African world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
In-text: (Wabuke, 2020)
Your Bibliography: Wabuke, H., 2020. Afrofuturism, Africanfuturism, and the Language of Black Speculative Literature. [online] Los Angeles Review of Books. Available at: <https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/afrofuturism-africanfuturism-and-the-language-of-black-speculative-literature/> [Accessed 27 June 2022].
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