ANALYSE OF THE VARIOUS THEMES, STYLES AND PATTERNS COMMONLY ASSOCIATED WITH THE COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE
Abstract
The collective literature of all postcolonial countries is referred to as Commonwealth Literature. It mostly refers to works of literature written by authors from the countries that the United Kingdom colonized. Commonwealth literature often refers to the writing produced by authors from North America, Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean. The United Kingdom had colonized each of these countries. Thus, Commonwealth literature refers to the writings of authors from nations such as Australia, New Zealand, Canada, India, Malaysia, and Singapore. Because of its historical, geographical, political, and linguistic components, the term "Commonwealth" is difficult to define while yet maintaining its status as a separate literary genre. Ironically, despite the fact that the concept of Commonwealth is based on the language and imperial past of the United Kingdom, its literature is not regarded as Commonwealth. Thus, the Commonwealth is associated with a number of elements, such as the introduction of British literary tendencies, the use of English in daily life, and the shared experience of British colonialism among the inhabitants of these countries. Thus, Commonwealth literature is a complicated synthesis of several ideologies derived from African literature, Marxist literature, symbolic literature, and contemporary literary tendencies that set authors from various sociocultural origins apart. The purpose of the study is to analyze the many topics, genres, and patterns that are frequently found in literature that comes from Commonwealth countries.





