The Utopian Generation
By (Author) Pepetela
Translated by David Brookshaw
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
20th November 2024
Canada
General
Fiction
869.342
Paperback
456
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
A seminal novel of African decolonization available for the first time in English translation.
Lisbon, 1961. To escape surveillance by the dictatorships secret police, African students meet at the Casa, a campus club, where they dream of the homelands they will free from colonialism. Following four young revolutionaries who dream of building an epic campaign for a liberated, socialist Angola, The Utopian Generation charts the intertwined destinies of Sara, an idealistic doctor; Anbal, an intense intellectual; Vtor, an aspiring political leader; and Malongo, a party-hopping soccer player. But when repression scatters them, they move from Europe to Africa, from idealism to disillusionment, from terror and battlefield violence to love, loss, grief, corruption, and cold-blooded calculation.
Vast in scope yet intricate and revealing in its insights into the psychological tensions of colonialism, The Utopian Generation is widely considered in the Portuguese-speaking world an essential novel of African decolonizationand is now available in English translation for the first time.
Praise for The Utopian Generation
"Pepetelas great novels suggest a continuity between generations, a harmonization of differences in a single totality. This urgency of belonging, this structure that contains differences and sets them into conflict, is, in the end, Angola ... Even as time disutopianizes generations, Pepetela remains a generation of his own."
Mia Couto
"Remarkable on several counts ...The Utopian Generation provides a unique vision of the recent turbulent history of Angolan society as seen by a disillusioned revolutionary.
World Literature Today
"In The Utopian Generation, Pepetela penetrates inside his characters to understand how they have been shaped by their experience of momentous events. He explores their individual values, their psychology, as well as the most intimate recesses of their minds."
Ana Mafalda Leite, The Postcolonial Literature of Lusophone Africa
"A novel of epic proportions that offers a multidimensional historical view of three crucial decades of modern Angolan history from 1961 to 1991. It is the first novel to offer a sustained, probing, heart-wrenching as well as in-depth critique of the postcolonial national project."
Fernando Arenas,Lusophone Africa: Beyond Independence
Born in Benguela, Angola, Pepetela fought as an MPLA guerrilla from 1969 to 1975, seeing front-line service against the armies of Portugal and apartheid South Africa, as well as rival rebel groups. After Angolan independence, he was Deputy Minister of Education (197682) and taught sociology at Agostinho Neto University (19842008).Awarded the Cames Prize, the Portuguese languages highest literary award, for his lifes work, Pepetela is the author of twenty-one novels that have won prizes in Holland, Spain, Portugal, Brazil, and Angola, and have been published in more than twenty languages. He lives in Luanda, Angola.
David Brookshaws many translations include Mia Coutos selected stories Sea Loves Me and his recent novels Woman of the Ashes and The Sword and the Spear.He has translated widely from the literatures of Lusophone Asia and the Azores Islands. Brookshaw is Professor Emeritus of Lusophone Studies at the University of Bristol, England.