Description

Book Synopsis
``There are many reasons to welcome Adeleke Ade?ko’s new edition of the letters of the Reverend Phillip Quaque: the letters bring new insights into the contradictions that defined the encounter between Europeans and West Africans in the modern period, and of Quaque's complicated life as he tried to negotiate his role as a subject caught between the aspiration to be modern and the brutality of the slave trade. Ade?ek?o’s careful editing of the letters makes them accessible to modern readers and ensures that the troubled and troubling voice of the African will become central to our understanding of the “Black Atlantic”.’ – Simon Gikandi, Robert Schirmer Professor of English, Princeton University.

Trade Review
‘‘There are many reasons to welcome Adélékè Adé??k??’s new edition of the letters of the Reverend Phillip Quaque: the letters bring new insights into the contradictions that defined the encounter between Europeans and West Africans in the modern period, and of Quaque's complicated life as he tried to negotiate his role as a subject caught between the aspiration to be modern and the brutality of the slave trade. Adé??k??’s careful editing of the letters makes them accessible to modern readers and ensures that the troubled and troubling voice of the African will become central to our understanding of the “Black Atlantic”.’ – Simon Gikandi, Robert Schirmer Professor of English, Princeton University

‘An accomplished literary study, taking Quaque most seriously and paying very close attention to his language – the tenor, tone, even identifying different dramatis personae of many Quaques in the letters occasioned by circumstance, and richly speculating on the meaningful relationships among and between all these literary strategies’. – Tejumola Olaniyan, Louise Durham Mead Professor of English and African Cultural Studies. University of Wisconsin Madison

‘This is a magnificent gift offering not just to the well-established field of West African church history, but to the wider area of identity formation in the era of early colonial capitalism. A text to be celebrated!’ – Ato Quayson, Professor of English, FRSU University & Director, Center for Diaspora and Transnational Studies, University of Toronto

Table of Contents
  • Abbreviations In Letters
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • 1. Arduous Pessimism of Native Agency in the Missionary Letters of Philip Quaque
  • 2. Letters of Rev. Philip Quaque
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Philip Quaque’s letters to London, 1763-1811

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    £33.20

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    A Paperback / softback by Adeleke Adeekq

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      View other formats and editions of Philip Quaque’s letters to London, 1763-1811 by Adeleke Adeekq

      Publisher: Unisa Press
      Publication Date: 01/07/2017
      ISBN13: 9781868888405, 978-1868888405
      ISBN10: 1868888401

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      ``There are many reasons to welcome Adeleke Ade?ko’s new edition of the letters of the Reverend Phillip Quaque: the letters bring new insights into the contradictions that defined the encounter between Europeans and West Africans in the modern period, and of Quaque's complicated life as he tried to negotiate his role as a subject caught between the aspiration to be modern and the brutality of the slave trade. Ade?ek?o’s careful editing of the letters makes them accessible to modern readers and ensures that the troubled and troubling voice of the African will become central to our understanding of the “Black Atlantic”.’ – Simon Gikandi, Robert Schirmer Professor of English, Princeton University.

      Trade Review
      ‘‘There are many reasons to welcome Adélékè Adé??k??’s new edition of the letters of the Reverend Phillip Quaque: the letters bring new insights into the contradictions that defined the encounter between Europeans and West Africans in the modern period, and of Quaque's complicated life as he tried to negotiate his role as a subject caught between the aspiration to be modern and the brutality of the slave trade. Adé??k??’s careful editing of the letters makes them accessible to modern readers and ensures that the troubled and troubling voice of the African will become central to our understanding of the “Black Atlantic”.’ – Simon Gikandi, Robert Schirmer Professor of English, Princeton University

      ‘An accomplished literary study, taking Quaque most seriously and paying very close attention to his language – the tenor, tone, even identifying different dramatis personae of many Quaques in the letters occasioned by circumstance, and richly speculating on the meaningful relationships among and between all these literary strategies’. – Tejumola Olaniyan, Louise Durham Mead Professor of English and African Cultural Studies. University of Wisconsin Madison

      ‘This is a magnificent gift offering not just to the well-established field of West African church history, but to the wider area of identity formation in the era of early colonial capitalism. A text to be celebrated!’ – Ato Quayson, Professor of English, FRSU University & Director, Center for Diaspora and Transnational Studies, University of Toronto

      Table of Contents
      • Abbreviations In Letters
      • Preface
      • Acknowledgements
      • 1. Arduous Pessimism of Native Agency in the Missionary Letters of Philip Quaque
      • 2. Letters of Rev. Philip Quaque
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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