Child and youth protagonists in Habila’s Measuring Time and Dangor’s Bitter Fruit

Authors

  • Aghogho Akpome Department of English, University of Zululand

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/2309-9070/tvl.v.55i2.1783

Keywords:

children, youth, transition, Nigeria, South Africa, family, dystopia

Abstract

Helon Habila’s Measuring Time and Achmat Dangor’s Bitter Fruit deploy child and youth protagonists to offer nuanced perspectives on contemporary nationhood in Nigeria and South Africa respectively, displacing the adult, and mostly male viewpoints that have dominated novelistic portrayals of postcolonial nationhood for decades. These protagonists are portrayed symbolically in the context of the biological family, which can be read in allegorical and metonymic ways to represent the nation as a social unit. This article explores the portrayal of these protagonists and their families for the ways in which they may reflect national anxieties in general, and the problems of recent socio-political transition in particular. It also highlights how the breakdown of the family, as well as the different pathways undertaken by characters may represent simultaneously dystopian and auspicious futures for Nigeria and South Africa. 

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Author Biography

  • Aghogho Akpome, Department of English, University of Zululand

    Aghogho Akpome teaches in the Department of English, University of Zululand. His research interests include literary (re)historicisation, narratives of identity/difference and nation (especially within postcolonial literatures), and African studies more broadly. He has published on narratives from South Africa, Nigeria and Rwanda. His doctoral project explored recent post-conflict and post(transitional) narratives from South Africa and Nigeria. 

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Published

2018-08-30

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Section

Research articles

How to Cite

Akpome, A. (2018). Child and youth protagonists in Habila’s Measuring Time and Dangor’s Bitter Fruit. Tydskrif Vir Letterkunde, 55(2), 4-20. https://doi.org/10.17159/2309-9070/tvl.v.55i2.1783