Abstract:
This study analyses Ama Ata Aidoo’s short stories, “In the Cutting of a Drink”, “The
Message” and “Certain Winds from the South” from a stylistic point of view. It employs
the devices of foregrounding to analyze the short stories based on the checklist of
linguistic and stylistic categories proposed by Leech and Short (2007). The study
sought to identify the significant linguistic features in the text, what the linguistic
features have been used for, and how the foregrounded features contribute to the
development of the themes of the stories. The study finds that Ama Ata Aidoo uses
specialized or localized vocabulary in the three short stories and that she uses concrete
nouns extensively to give physical appeal to especially the settings of the short stories.
She uses various sentence types for specific purposes. She has a way of weaving round
by describing things, events, places and even feelings through the use of various
subordinate clauses instead of naming them. The author adopts the traditional folktale
style of narrating her stories and prefers the first-person narrator point of view. Ama
Ata Aidoo succeeds in making her stories authentically African as she uses various
linguistic features to bring out themes such as the rural- urban divide that promotes
migration, change of identity and moral decadence that characterized post-independent
Ghana. She emphasizes the ritual of pitying in the local community which indicates
love and concern for one another in the rural setting which contrasts greatly with ‘no
one cares’ attitude of city life.
Description:
A thesis submitted to the school of Graduate Studies, in
partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of
the degree of Master of Philosophy
(English Language)
Department of English Education
Faculty of Foreign Languages Education
UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION, WINNEBA