Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/6617
Title: I think therefore I am: linking human exploitation to religious irrationality in Kourouma’s Allah Is Not obliged
Authors: Appiah, Simon Kofi
Kodah, Mawuloe
Keywords: Exploitation
Irrational
Religion
Intra-cultural critique
Kourouma
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: University of Cape Coast
Abstract: Kourouma’s narrative texts bring to the fore misery and desperation, resulting largely from human exploitation connected to ignorance and religious irrationality. Descartes’ all time famous statement “I think therefore I am” grounds the essence of human existence on thinking. Descartes’ assertion has implications for religion when it is postulated as the quest for the ultimate source of meaning in life. Kourouma’s (2000) Allah is Not Obliged establishes a link between human exploitation and unsound practice of religion, revealing his nauseating aversion to and denunciation of irrational religion. From literary and philosophy of religion perspectives, Allah is Not Obliged can be read as a narrative that raises consciousness about the potential of irrational religion becoming a source of exploitation and mental enslavement. Within the framework of such reading, Allah is Not Obliged becomes a plea for an intra-cultural critique of African religiosity
Description: 15p:, ill.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/6617
ISSN: 23105496
Appears in Collections:Department of French

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