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Gates the signifying monkey5/23/2023 The Fon hail him as a “divine linguist” who knows all languages. Esu is closely associated with language and its powers: rhetoric and persuasion, slipperiness and metaphor. A central figure in this cultural tradition is Esu-Elegbara, a “divine trickster,” whose attributes are described in the prose and poetry of West Africa. Gates begins his search for the “black tradition’s” theory of itself in the Fon and Yoruba cultures of Benin and Nigeria, and among the remnants of those cultures that survived the Middle Passage to thrive in the Americas. Often regarded as a foundational text of black literary theory, the book’s stated intention is “if not exactly to invent a black theory…to locate and identify how the 'black tradition' had theorized about itself.” Gates achieves this by focusing on the Black cultural practice of “signifyin(g),” a sophisticated form of wordplay, which Gates traces back to a figure of Yoruba myth, and forward through the novels of Alice Walker, Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, and other major African-American authors. The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism is a groundbreaking work of literary theory by revered African-American scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr.
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