An edition of Reading and Repair (2019)

Reading and Repair

Fictions of "Mau Mau"

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Reading and Repair
Elliot Ross
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 17, 2022 | History
An edition of Reading and Repair (2019)

Reading and Repair

Fictions of "Mau Mau"

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

This dissertation argues that works of literature offer a valuable critical supplement to historical and legal accounts of colonial violence, due to the common investment of literary texts in thematizing moral complexity and complicity, and by drawing attention to intimate and social forms of harm that might otherwise go unaccounted for. Following the recent successful lawsuit against the British government by elderly Kenyans who survived torture in the 1950s, as well as recent historical scholarship on the colonial government's brutal counterinsurgency, I argue that the paradigmatic anticolonial event commonly referred to as the “Mau Mau” uprising has been reframed in terms of a series of grave human rights abuses. I examine the diverse ways in which the Mau Mau struggle has been figured in narrative fiction, focusing on works by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, Marjorie Oludhe Macgoye, and the white supremacist Robert Ruark. The dissertation shows literary texts to be sites of distinct forms of knowledge concerning the harms of political violence.

My readings demonstrate that fictions of Mau Mau have figured that crisis as both a crime that demands urgent redress and an event whose damage is permanent and irreparable, each text staging in distinct ways the structuring paradox of historical reparation as an impossible ethical demand that must nonetheless be insisted upon. I think of reparations claims as radical decolonizing demands, countering recent critiques of the “politics of reparations” as a liberal departure from properly emancipationist thinking.

Publish Date
Language
English

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Cover of: Reading and Repair
Reading and Repair: Fictions of "Mau Mau"
2019, [publisher not identified]
in English

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Edition Notes

Department: English and Comparative Literature.

Thesis advisor: Brent H. Edwards.

Thesis (Ph.D.)--Columbia University, 2019.

Published in
[New York, N.Y.?]

The Physical Object

Pagination
1 online resource.

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL44319384M
OCLC/WorldCat
1083236159

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marc_columbia MARC record

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