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  1. Houseboy. (novel) Houseboy is a novel in the form of a diary written by Ferdinand Oyono, first published in 1956 in French as Une vie de boy (Paris: René Julliard) [1] and translated into English in 1966 by John Reed for Heinemann 's African Writers Series. [2]

  2. 3.74. 2,226 ratings158 reviews. Toundi Ondoua, the rural African protagonist of Houseboy, encounters a world of prisms that cast beautiful but unobtainable glimmers, especially for a black youth in colonial Cameroon. Houseboy, written in the form of Toundi's captivating diary and translated from the original French, discloses his awe of the ...

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  3. Feb 25, 2020 · Houseboy: Theme of Colonialism. Ferdinand Oyono crafts the novel Houseboy about the oppression black people go through in the hands of the white colonialist. In West Africa specifically Spanish Guinea, this was under the European rule. The author uses a West African boy to expose the white administration practices that were crude and evil to ...

  4. Overview. Houseboy (1956) is a riveting narrative by Ferdinand Oyono. Though shorter in length than most novels, Houseboy addresses the weighty topic of colonization and its effects on the native population of Cameroon. More specifically, Oyono’s story delves into the life of Toundi Ondoua, a young rural African man whose life is changed when ...

  5. Feb 23, 2020 · Houseboy: Summary. Ferdinand Oyono ‘s Houseboy written in the first person and in the form of diary entries in two exercise books. It describes the relationship between French colonialists and native Cameroonians during the period of colonization from a Houseboy’s perspectives. The Houseboy, Toundi, escaped from Cameroon where he was wanted ...

  6. Aug 11, 2021 · Introduction: A Cameroonian writer and diplomat, Ferdinand Oyono lived between 1929 and 2010. He is best known for his first novel, Houseboy, originally written in French and published in 1956. The novel has as its background the colonial experience in francophone Africa. Its narrative punctures the ideals of the French assimilation policy and exposes the

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  8. Houseboy's power comes from the scope in which it makes its statements. It shows you what it needs to show in the everyday life of a houseboy, not in the events of revolution or the political struggles that eventually threw off the colonial yoke. It makes you think of Arendt's phrase about the "banality of evil." Oyono didn't write for long.

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