Browsing Journal Articles (ED) by Author "Nyongesa, Andrew W."
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
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The centre and pathology: Postmodernist reading of madness in the oppressor in contemporary fiction
Nyongesa, Andrew W. (Taylor & Francis Group, 2023-08)This study examines the pathological consequences of in-between identity on the members of the dominant group in polarized cosmopolitan settings in Lessing’s The Grass is Singing (1950). The study is a postmodernist reading ... -
A Comparative Reading of Dialogism and Monologism in Emecheta’s The Joys of Motherhood (1979) and Wanner’s London, Cape Town, Jorburg (2014)
Nyongesa, Andrew W. (Sabinet African Journals, 2023-08)Many literary scholars have demonstrated the merits of divergent arguments within the novel. According to these conversations, the authorial voice becomes a witness of the diverse arguments raised by characters without ... -
The Feminist Writer and the Subaltern: A Perspective on Ole Kulet’s Blossoms of the Savannah
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Murimi, J. G.; Makokha, J. K. (Taylor & Francis Group, 2021-12)Dominant literary conversations like post-structuralism have crowned the literary writer as an impartial and reliable voice for the voiceless in oppressive cultural settings. Since the marginal group is weak and cannot ... -
Literary Writers and the Subaltern: (Mis)-representation of Some Marginal Groups in Selected Contemporary African Novels
Nyongesa, Andrew W. (LIFT: The Journal of Literature and Performing Arts, 2024-02)Dominant literary conversations like post-structuralism have crowned the literary writer as an impartial and reliable voice for the voiceless in oppressive cultural settings. Since the marginal group is weak and cannot ... -
Onward and Return Migrations: Migrant Characters in Hisham Matars’ The Return (2017) and A Month in Siena (2019)
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Murimi, G.; Kimani, K. (2021-07)Migration scholars have divergent views concerning the experiences of migrant characters in foreign nations. The first group of scholars suggest that migrant characters are never settled and because of disarticulating ... -
Otherness and Marginal Spaces: Beyond Politics and Race in Contemporary African Novels
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Murimi, G.; Makokha, J. K. (2021-07)Many postcolonial literary scholars associate otherness with political and racial marginalisation of groups. Indomitable postcolonial voices such as Frantz Fanon and Edward Said take this trajectory, thereby negating other ... -
Otherness and pathology: Parallels between Martyrdom and the Fragmented Self in Nuruddin Farah's Close Sesame
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Murimi, G.; Makokha, J. K. (2021-05) -
Otherness and the Fragmented Self: A Review of The Return by Hisham Matar
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Murimi, G.; Makokha, J. K. (Taylor & Francis Group, 2021-04) -
The Single and Multiple Melodies: A Comparative Reading of Traditional and Contemporary Feminist Writing
Nyongesa, Andrew W.; Mwichuli, M. (Forum for World Literature Studies, 2023-12)This article juxtaposes traditional and contemporary East African feminist narratives with reference to Nuruddin Farah’s From a Crooked Rib and Nadifa Mohamed’s Orchard of Lost Souls. Most feminist narratives in East Africa ... -
Wagar and Motley “Archaic” Vestiges: A Postmodernist Reading of Contemporary Somali Fiction
Nyongesa, Andrew W. (Literature Association of South Africa and Unisa Press., 2022)The advent of the modernist dream resulted in the universalisation of culture, which entails deliberate effort to abandon traditional ways of life that foster difference and instead embracing national cultures to bring ...