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Osiris Rising

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Cover artist
  
R. M. Osotsi

Publisher
  
Per Ankh

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Originally published
  
1995

Page count
  
348

Country
  
Senegal

4.2/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1995

Pages
  
348

Author
  
Ayi Kwei Armah

Genre
  
Novel

OCLC
  
256475128

Osiris Rising httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen55fOsi

Similar
  
Ayi Kwei Armah books, Novels

Osiris Rising: A Novel of Africa Past, Present and Future is a novel written by Ayi Kwei Armah and published in 1995. The story revolves around an African-American woman, Ast, who goes to Africa looking for heritage after she gets her PhD. The text addresses a number of contemporary African issues, including the residual colonial institutions that limit African culture, the hypocritical nature of African Americans and expatriates who try to help Africa and the contemplation of "What is African history and culture?" The book is published by Per Ankh, a Senagalese publishing company.

Contents

Characters

Many of Osiris Rising's characters appear one-dimensional and ludicrous, almost "puppet-like". Ast, the main character, seems the most credible and developed among the characters, yet even her psychology in the interactions with Seth can become absurd. At best the characters, act as principles representing further exploration of the book's themes. The following are the book's main characters:

  • Ast - an African American, who has received her PhD in history, then decides to travel to Africa to trace her roots. She also was taught by her grandmother in hieroglyphics since her childhood.
  • Asar - a literature professor with strong ideals of what Africa should be and how to achieve a more progressive African politics and society. While he attended college with Seth and Ast, he was the top of his class, however when he completed his graduate schooling he left for Africa in order to participate in the fight against apartheid.
  • Ras Cinque Jomo Equiano - a former civil-rights activist named Sheldon Tubman, who moves to Africa to get more in touch with the "African experience", but instead forms a cult around himself and abuses his power to gain a number of followers, including three wives.
  • Seth Soja - sometimes called SSS or DD, Soja is the deputy director of the country's security force. He controls the ultimate power in the country. When at school with Ast and Seth, he was always jealous of Asar's educational success.
  • Setting

    Armah sets the story in a contemporary unnamed West African country. A majority of the story takes place on the campus of Manda's Teachers' College, where Asar and Ast both teach and where many of their agendas come to fruition.

    Thematic elements

    As the title implies, Armah transposes the ancient Egyptian Osiris myth into modern Africa. This first becomes evident when Armah names each chapter using Egyptian words. The main characters closely align with the major movers of the myth: the reforming Asar identifying with Osiris, Asar's companion Ast portrayed as Isis, and Soya representing Set.

    The relationship between Ast and Asar reflects a Pan-African model of uniting both the African American with no ethnic tribe and the native African who clearly identifies with a single village. This represents a similar relationship to that between an Afro-Caribbean man and an African women in Armah's novel Fragments. This relationship, one of love and commitment that works fervently for the emancipation of African thought, helps reinforce Armah's message of pan-African cooperation.

    Armah presents a very critical view of the character Sheldon Tubman. He portrays this character, a strong civil-rights activist in the state, as nothing more than a "Diaspora Hustler" - someone who makes a big deal of returning to the African tradition but instead uses this fake "tradition" to benefit himself. Anne Adams, in her comparison of the two authors' repertoires in "Literary Pan-Africanism", identifies this as a position also strongly expressed by Guadeloupean Maryse Condé.

    Critical reception

    Osiris Rising has been reviewed by a handful of world literature scholars in institutions that provide a western education:

    Andrew Perrin of UCLA comments "Artistically the book leaves something to be desired as well," however, "Ayi Kwei Armah is an astute observer and analyst of Africa's contemporary conditions." However, he says that Ast and Asar's intellectual movement to change the political situation is almost "inspiring, even hopeful." Derek Wright comments that "This powerful and searching novel is not without its weakenss... it makes unexciting fiction." To better explain this he says "Osiris Rising is very low on both dramatic incident and psychological intensity." Wright, though he acknowledges the book is principally "to explore the real, albeit restricted, options for change open to Africa's inventive and radical thinkers", feels that much of the book is largely undeveloped: lacking development in character dynamics, the context of the state, and the characters themselves.

    References

    Osiris Rising Wikipedia