Cheryl Toman, associate professor of French and director of both the Women's and Gender Studies Program and the Ethnic Studies Program, recently published her second single-authored book, Women Writers of Gabon: Literature and Herstory.
Toman's new book demonstrates how the invisibility of women (historically, politically, cross-culturally, etc.) has led to the omission of Gabon’s literature from the African canon. It also discusses in depth the unique elements of Gabonese women’s writing that show it is worthy of critical recognition and that prove why Gabonese women writers must be considered a major force in African literature.
The work is the only book-length critical study of Gabonese literature that exists in English. Throughout the various chapters, the book explores, among other things, contributions that are unique to Gabonese women writers such as:
- Definitions of African feminisms as they pertain to Gabonese society;
- The rewriting of oral histories, rituals and traditions of the Fang ethnic group;
- One of the first introductions of same-sex couples in African Francophone literature;
- Discussions on the impact of witchcraft on development; and
- The appropriating of the epic poetry known as the mvet.