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(RI.1) Read the following statement: Current African women writers have embraced the freedom to address a broader range of topics and perspectives
than have historically been seen in African fiction
Which selection from the article BEST supports this inference?
"Before, the space to write big grand historical narratives was mostly a man's space. Women were expected to focus on smaller, more domestic
stories," says Alneho Edoro Glines, an assistant professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the editor of the African
iterature blog Brittle Paper
Older African historical fiction tends to obsess about that colonial moment, this era when African history became legible to the Western world in
O a certain way," she says. "But many of the writers working now are moving the clock further back. They're saying, this is just one of many things
that defines the African past, a footnote in a much longer history."
"This is generational [of African writers] isn't just writing about colonialism and postcolonialism, or just looking at African governance and its
failures," says Gappah. "We write history. We write romance. We write science fiction. In this generation we have gained the freedom to write
about the things that American and European authors write about, which is to say anything we choose."
For Liberian American writer Waye tu Moore, in her 2018 novel "She Would Be King." it was her country's founding days shot through the prism
of magical realism. For Moroccan novelist Lalla Lalami, it was the story of one of the European conquests of the new world, narrated by one of
the expedition's North African enslaved people (That novel, The Moors Account," was a finalist for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize

User Eroak
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1 Answer

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Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

VA, 1. Abductions by UFOs, 1. Abraham, 7. Abram, 7. Adama, 7. Adamski, George (1891–1965), 8. Aenstrians, 10. Aetherius, 11. Affa, 12. Agents, 13.

those are the answers

:)

User Kuzma
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