Nigeria: Facts
Fictional Texts
Character Analysis
Stylistic Devices
100

The capital city of Nigeria 

Abuja

100

"You decided that America was not for you"

2nd person perspective

100
Direct and indirect quotations. 

"..." (l. 12). 

... (c.f. ll. 12-14). 

100

"His eyes reminded her of the liquid-gold oils of her country." 

Comparison/Metaphor

200

The main three indigenous languages of Nigeria

Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo

200

A brief fictional prose format with limited characters in a short time frame that often ends in an open ending. 

Short story

200
External characteristics of a character.

Age, appearance, education, relationships. 

200

"He was as tall as a tree and she had to look up to meet his eyes."

Simile

300

The civil war which marked Nigeria's history

The Biafra War

300
"Lagos was not the same as I remembered 15 years ago."

First-person narration

300

Internal characteristics of a character.

Thoughts, ideas, beliefs, motivations, ...

300
Analysing language use. 
- Analysing words and word fields. 

- Sentence length and structure. 

- Use of native words. 

...

400

The challenges of English as a state language of Nigeria

- loss of identity

- reinforcing colonial history

- loss of indigenous languages

400

In the continuation of the story, you pay attention to these things. 

1. Narrative perspective is the same as in the excerpt.

2. The continuation is believable. 

3. The language and tone matches the original text. 

4. The story is creative but focuses on the task at hand. 

400

The structure of a good analysis paragraph. 

1. A topic sentence that tells the reader what the paragraph is about. 

2. Examples to support it with evidence from the text. 

3. Explanations of the function in the text and connection to the analysis focus. 

4. Transition to the next point. 

400

"Was it worth it to leave Lagos behind?"

Rhetorical question

500

The push factors that make people leave Nigeria

- corruption scandals (government, police, ...)

- social issues (e.g. homophobia, sexism, ...)

- work and educational opportunities (e.g. to support family, ...)

- personal reasons 

500

The three types of presentations of the third-person narration

Limited

Neutral 

Omniscient

500

The thesis statement includes these three things. 

1. Who is the character from the story and what is their relationship to the narrator

2. How is the character presented

3. What is the analytical focus

500
The difference between tone and mood. 

Tone: the author's attitude towards something (ironic, serious, playful, angry)


Mood: the atmosphere created through the use of language (fear, excitement, ...)