TY - BOOK AU - Aidoo,Ama Ata TI - Our Sister Killjoy: or, Reflections from a black-eyed squint SN - 9780582308459 (pbk.) : AV - PR9379.9.A35 O9 1994 PY - 1994///, c1977 CY - London, UK PB - New York, NY, Longman KW - Women KW - Ghana KW - Fiction KW - Women and literature KW - History KW - 20th century N1 - "First published by 1977"--T.p. verso N2 - "Ata Aidoo's Our Sister Killjoy: or, Reflections from a Black-Eyed Squint (1979) is a relentless attack on the notions of exile as relief from the societal constraints of national development and freedom to live in a cultural environment suitable for creativity. In this work, Aidoo questions certain prescribed theories of exile including the reasons for exile--particularly among African men. The novel exposes a rarely heard viewpoint in literature in English--that of the African woman exile; Aidoo's protagonist Sissie, as the "eye" of her people, is a sojourner in the "civilized" world of the colonizers. Our Sister Killjoy, which reflects Aidoo's own travels abroad, was written partially in the United States. Moreover, although it was published in 1979, first editions carry a 1966 copyright, closer to the time in which she was traveling. Although Aidoo experienced the supposed freedom of exile herself, her personalized prose-poem-novel illustrates her commitment to rebuild her former colonized home and confront those who have forgotten their duty to their native land...." _From Literay Criticism in Literature Resource Center ER -