(1981) recounts Oluwole (Wole) Soyinka's first eleven years (1934-1944), centred on his home life in Abeokuta, within the parsonage compound, where his father, ‘Essay' [S.A.], was headmaster and his mother, ‘Wild Christian', was a homemaker and market woman. A fifteen-chapter autobiography,
Akéis an artistic shaping of memories. It has received accolades and some negative reaction – for its lack of strict adherence to psychological perspectives on childhood and consciousness. A special issue of
The Southern Review(23.3 (July 1987)) is devoted to the reception of and strategies for approaching
Aké.
Aké reveals Wole's growing consciousness and his moral awareness. The movement is from the general to the specific, from a ménage of events and
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Citation: McLuckie, Craig. "Aké: the Years of Childhood". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 11 March 2004 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=12846, accessed 25 November 2024.]