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The study examined the processes of othering in seven selected texts from East Africa:
Ebrahim Hussein’s Kinjeketile (1969), Abdurazak Gurnah’s Afterlives (2020),
Emmanuel Jal’s War Child (2009), Kinyanjui Kombani’s The Last Villains of Molo
(2004), Gil Courtemanche’s A Sunday at the Pool in Kigali (2000), Gael Faye’s Small
Country (2016), and John Ruganda’s Shreds of Tenderness (2001) to determine how
violence is used not only as a tool to subjugate groups but also as a means through
which the subjugated groups are traumatised and challenge marginalisation. The study
also analysed violence-induced trauma and its impact on the characters as well as how
authors give agency to the marginalised victims of violence and trauma in the texts. The
texts were purposively selected based on their representation of marginalisation,
violence, and trauma across the East African region. The study highlights the
importance of literature in representing experience and its role in fostering dialogue on
‘otherness’ and marginalisation. It employed Edward Said’s post-colonial theory of ‘the
Other’ and Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalytic theory in its discourse analysis. Said’s
concept of ‘the Other’ as outlined in Orientalism is extended to examine how
stereotypes and half-truths constructed by dominant groups foster a culture of violence
through the marginalisation of other groups. Freud’s ‘Uncanny’ is instrumental in
exploring trauma as a consequence of violence affecting the characters within the texts.
The study utilised a qualitative approach, involving close textual analysis of the primary
texts to investigate how violence, trauma, and notions of identity are constructed and
represented. To achieve this, it examined narrative strategies used to portray
marginalisation, violence, and trauma. The findings indicated that dominant groups
assert their power by subjugating subordinate groups. This subjugation occurs through
the degradation of the language of the “subordinates”, thereby ascribing inferiority to
both their language and to themselves. While violence is used as a tool for
marginalisation, marginalised groups can also utilise it to contest their oppression. The
marginalisation and violence lead to trauma. The study concluded that literature does
not merely aim to depict experience but also to evoke reflection. Therefore, while
literary works depict real-life moments, they offer alternative perspectives for
understanding these situations and provide a platform where both characters and readers
can re-experience the events and confront the resulting trauma. Although the study
established a direct link between marginalisation, violence, and trauma, it recommends
further research on whether there is a possibility for the marginalised to negotiate for
space without resorting to violence. |
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