JAMB Syllabus For Literature In English 2024

The JAMB Literature in English Syllabus is Out! This article is painstakingly written to justify the fact that the JAMB Syllabus for Literature in English 2024 and Recommended Texts have been officially released.

We have properly penned down a breakdown of questions and answers you might likely see in the 2024 JAMB Literature in English Syllabus which is targeted at preparing candidates for the upcoming JAMB Post UTME.

Using the JAMB syllabus to study for your examination is the open secret to getting a high score.

JAMB Literature in English Syllabus 2024

DRAMA

Topics/Contents/Notes:

1. Types:

  • Tragedy
  • Comedy
  • Tragicomedy
  • Melodrama
  • Farce
  • Opera etc.

2. Dramatic Techniques

  • Characterization
  • Dialogue
  • Flashback
  • Mime
  • Costume
  • Music/Dance
  • Decor/scenery
  • Acts/Scenes
  • Soliloquy/aside
  • Lighting etc.

3. Interpretation of the Prescribed Texts

  • Theme
  • Plot
  • Socio-political context
  • Setting

Objectives:

Candidates should be able to:

  • Identify the various types of drama;
  • Analyze the contents of the various types of drama;
  • Compare and contrast the features of different dramatic types;
  • Demonstrate adequate knowledge of dramatic techniques used in each prescribed text;
  • Differentiate between styles of selected playwrights;
  • Determine the theme of any prescribed text;
  • Identify the plot of the play;
  • Apply the lessons of the play to everyday living
  • Identify the spatial and temporal setting of the play.

PROSE

Topics/Contents/Notes:

1. Types:

  •  Fiction
    – Novel
    – Novella/Novelette
    – Short story
  • Non-fiction
    – Biography
    – Autobiography
    – Memoir
  • Faction: a combination of fact and fiction

2. Narrative Techniques/Devices:

  • Point of view
    – Omniscient/Third Person
    – First Person
  • Characterization
    – Round, flat, foil, hero, antihero, etc
  • Language

3. Textual Analysis

  • Theme
  • Plot
  • Setting (Temporal/Spatial)
  • Socio-political context

Objectives: 

Candidates should be able to:

  • Differentiate between types of prose;
  • Identify the category that each prescribed text belongs to;
  • Analyze the components of each type of prose;
  • Identify the narrative techniques used in each of the prescribed texts;
  • Determine an author’s narrative style;
  • Distinguish between one type of character from another;
  • Determine the thematic pre-occupation of the author of the prescribed text;
  • Indicate the plot of the novel; identify the temporal and spatial setting of the novel.
  • Identify the temporal and spatial setting of the novel
  • Relate the prescribed text to real-life situations.

POETRY

Topics/Contents/Notes:

1. Types:

  • Sonnet
  • Ode
  • Lyrics
  • Elegy
  • Ballad
  • Panegyric
  • Epic
  • Blank Verse, etc.

2. Poetic devices

  • Structure
  • Imagery
  • Sound(Rhyme/Rhythm, repetition, pun, onomatopoeia, etc.)
  • Diction
  • Persona

3. Appreciation

  • Thematic preoccupation
  • Socio-political relevance
  • Style.

Objectives:

Candidates should be able to:

  • Identify different types of poetry;
  • Compare and contrast the features of different poetic types:
  • Determine the devices used by various poets;
  • Show how poetic devices are used for aesthetic effect in each poem;
  • Deduce the poet’s preoccupation from the poem;
  • Appraise poetry as an art with moral values;
  • Apply the lessons from the poem to real-life situations.

GENERAL LITERARY PRINCIPLES

Topics/Contents/Notes:

  • Literary terms:
    foreshadowing, suspense, theatre, monologue, dialogue, soliloquy, symbolism, protagonist, antagonist, figures of speech, satire, stream of consciousness, synecdoche, metonymy, etc, in addition to those listed above under the different genres.
  • Literary principles
    i. Direct imitation in play;
    ii. Versification in drama and poetry;
    iii. Narration of people’s experiences;
    iv. Achievement of aesthetic value, etc.
  • Relationship between literary terms and principles.

Objectives:

Candidates should be able to:

  • Identify literary terms in drama, prose, and poetry;
  • Identify the general principles of Literature;
  • Differentiate between literary terms and principles;
  • Use literary terms appropriately.

LITERARY APPRECIATION

Topics/Contents/Notes:

  • Unseen passages/extracts from Drama, Prose, and Poetry.

Objectives:

Candidates should be able to:

  • Determine literary devices used in a given passage/extract;
  • Provide a meaningful interpretation of the given passage/extract;
  • Relate the extract to true life experiences.

JAMB Literature Novel 2024

Drama:

African:

  •  Frank Ogodo Ogbeche: Harvest of Corruption

Non-African:

  • William Shakespeare: Othello

Prose:
African:

  • Amma Darko: Faceless
  • Bayo Adebowale: Lonely Days

Non-African:

  • Richard Wright: Native Son

Poetry:

African:

  • Birago Diop: Vanity
  • Gbemisola Adeoti: Ambush
  • Gabriel Okara: Piano and Drums
  •  Gbanabam Hallowell: The Dining Table
  • Lenrie Peter: The Panic of Growing Older
  • Kofi Awoonor: The Anvil and the Hammer

Non-African:

  • Alfred Tennyson: Crossing the Bar
  • George Herbert: The Pulley
  • William Blake: The School Boy
  • William Morris: The Proud King

JAMB Literature in English Text

Here is the list of texts for the JAMB Literature in English;

Drama

  • African: The Lion and the Jewel by Wole Soyinka
  • Non-African: Look Back in Anger by John Osborne

Prose

  • African:
    • Unexpected Joy at Dawn by Alex Agyei-Agyir
    • Second Class Citizen by Buchi Emecheta
  • Non-African;
    • Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte

Drame

  • African:
    • Black Woman by Leopold Sedar Senghor
    • The Leader and the Led by Niyi Osundare
    • The Grieved Lands by Agostino Neto
    • The Song of the Woman of My Land by Oumar Farouk Sesay
    • Raider of the Treasure Trove by Lade Wosornu
    • A Government Driver on His Retirement by Onu Chibuike
  • Non-African
    • The Good Morrow by John Donne
    • Caged Bird by Maya Angelou
    • The Journey of the Magi by T.S. Elliot
    • Bats by D.H. Lawrence

The following is the list of recommended textbooks for JAMB Literature in English;

Anthologies

  • Obafemi. O. and Agoi (eds) Of Shadows and Rainbows – Musings in Times of Covid (An Anthology of Poems, Plays, and Short Stories) PEN Nigeria, Online
  • Hayward, J. (ed.) (1968) The Penguin Book of English Verse, London: Penguin
  • Johnson, R. et al. (eds.) (1996) New Poetry from Africa, Ibadan: UP Plc
  • Kermode, F. et al. (1964) Oxford Anthology of English Literature, Vol. II, London: OUP
  • Nduke Ofiono and Odoh Diego Okenyodo (eds) Camouflage: Best of Contemporary Writing from Nigeria, an Anthology of New Nigerian Writers, Mace Books Association, 2021, New edition.
  • Parker, E.W. (ed.) (1980) A Peagent of Longer Poems London: Longman
  • Senanu, K. E. and Vincent, T. (eds.) (1993) A Selection of African Poetry, Lagos: Longman
  • Soyinka, W. (ed.) (1987) Poems of Black Africa, Ibadan: Heinemann

Critical Text

  • Abrams, M. H. (1981) A Glossary of Literary Terms, (4th Edition) New York, Holt Rinehart and Winston
  • Emeaba, O. E. (1982)A Dictionary of Literature, Aba: Inteks Press
  • Murphy, M. J. (1972) Understanding Unseen, An Introduction to English Poetry and English Novel for Overseas Students, George Allen and Unwin Ltd.

It is advised that you read through the topics listed here because they will enable you to prepare and read for the JAMB Literature in English in a more focused manner. This concludes our conversation. If you have any questions, please use the comment section below.