![]() ![]() ![]() “The Romance of Empire: Oroonoko and the Trade in Slaves.” The New Eighteenth Century: Theory, Politics, English Literature. Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory Manchester: MUP, 2002. Aphra Behn's Oroonoko in a New Adaptation. ![]() “Anti-colonialism Vs Colonialism in Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko or, The Royal Slave.” Web īandele, ’Biyi. Keywords: Oroonoko, Aphra Ben, Royal Slave, Master of Dignity, Scriptibility, Barthesian CodesĪbdelwahed, Said I. On the contrary, it asserts Oroonoko informs the postmodernist/plural concept of ‘being’, embracing a variety of identities from the “royal slave” to the ‘master of dignity’. Then, drawing upon deconstructionist approach, it surmises neither the text nor its protagonist, Oroonoko, should be categorized into any absolute category. In order to explore those intervening meanings, this study applies Barthesian codes for reading narratives. It holds that Oroonoko is interwoven with multiple codes which serve as different socio-cultural agents proliferating variety of meanings often disseminating one another. It assumes that it is the “scriptiblity” of the text that enables it encompassing heterogeneous meanings which should not be reduced to any privileged interpretation. The objective of this study is to examine why the novella accommodates such contradictory readings. This paper involves a study on Aphra Ben’s Oroonoko (1688) which is considered by many as the first black narrative of English literature, an abolitionist text, while observed by some others as extremely colonialist. ![]()
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