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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Albert Ulutorti Green*, Adaeze Joy Nnatuanya, Modili Amarachi Chigozie
Format: Recurso digital
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2026
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20061277
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Table of Contents:
  • This study analyses literary texts as interpretive and conceptual frameworks for sustainable development initiatives, focusing on how narrative patterns influence perceptions of progress, crises, and transformation. It contends that literature serves as more than just aesthetic expression; it is an essential cultural resource that mirrors, analyses, and reinterprets prevailing development paradigms. This study illustrates how literary works reflect the processes of societal change and sustainable transformation by exploring the narrative progression from disruption, through conflict, to resolution. Rooted on Amartya Sen's Capability Approach, the research positions development as the enhancement of human freedoms, agency, and well-being, rather than solely economic growth. In this context, literary narratives are important as they reveal lived experiences of inequity, environmental degradation, cultural disturbance, and resilience. The research utilises qualitative and interpretive methodologies, employing thematic and narrative analysis to investigate how certain literary texts formulate various perspectives on development influenced by ethics, culture, and social justice. The results indicate that literary texts fulfil both diagnostic and creative roles in developmental discourse. They reveal the constraints of technocratic frameworks while concurrently presenting innovative prospects for more inclusive and sustainable futures. The study ultimately finds that including narrative views into development planning improves cultural relevance, ethical awareness, and participatory involvement, therefore enhancing the overall efficacy of sustainable development techniques.