1st Edition

Ngugi wa Thiong’o Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Resistance

By Amitayu Chakraborty Copyright 2024

    As a part of Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literature, the book explores the complex of ways in which Ngugi wa Thiong’o wrestles with issues of nationalism and ethnicity through his politically subversive and creatively intense literary texts. His novels and plays are fraught with his anxiety, resistance, and defiance concerning Gikuyu ethnicity, Kenyan nationalism, and a curious, globalectic imaginary. In this way, the book re- appreciates Ngugi offering scholarly insights into the present debates over identity politics as well as aesthetics that animate contemporary research in postcolonial studies, world literature, and African studies across the globe.

    Introduction

    Section One: Why Ngugi wa Thiong’o (Again!)?

    Section Two: Conceptualising “Nationalism” and “Ethnicity”

    Section Three: Nation- Building, Political Tribalism, and Moral Ethnicity in Kenya/Africa

    Section Four: About the Book

    1 The Phase of Anxiety (1950s– 1960s)

    Section One: Gendered Anxieties in The Black Hermit

    Section Two: Clitoridectomal Anxieties in The River Between

    Section Three: Anxieties, Conflicts, and Violence in Weep Not, Child

    2 The Phase of Polemics (1960s– 1970s)

    Section One: Nationalism, Ethnicity, and the Trials of the Unheroic in A Grain of Wheat

    Section Two: Moral Ethnicity and Marxist Revolution in Petals of Blood

    Section Three: Marxism and Mythopoeia in The Trial of Dedan Kimathi

    3 The Phase of Defiance (1970s onwards)

    Section One: Subaltern Self- Mastery and Dialogic Resistance in I Will Marry When I Want

    Section Two: Myth, Ethnicity, and Plurality in Devil on the Cross and Matigari

    Section Three: Globalectic Defiance in Wizard of the Crow

    Conclusion

    The Outcome: A Pursuit of Globalectics

     

    Biography

    Amitayu Chakraborty works as Assistant Professor of English at Durgapur Women’s College. He did his PhD from Visva- Bharati in 2017. His doctoral dissertation was on Ngugi wa Thiong’o. He has a keen interest in postcolonial studies.