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Irony, Agency and the Global Imaginary in Contemporary Nigerian and Kenyan Literature

Irony, Agency and the Global Imaginary in Contemporary Nigerian and Kenyan Literature cover

Irony, Agency and the Global Imaginary in Contemporary Nigerian and Kenyan Literature

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Description

An examination of alternate imaginaries of 'the global' in post-millennium anglophone African literature and the differing forms of agency that these imaginaries produce.

Irony, Agency and the Global Imaginary in Contemporary Nigerian and Kenyan Literature provides deft and detailed readings of writers' perspectives that theorize 'the global' as experienced through vectors of globality such as the tourism industry, development agencies, multinational media, NGOs and consumerism. Penny Cartwright develops a conceptual distinction between two types of global imaginaries: 'territorial' imaginaries that treat privileged spaces or locations as 'global', thus demanding strategies of physical access and mobility; and 'orientational' imaginaries that treat 'globality' as a disposition or attitude that individuals perform or embody.

Drawing detailed case studies from the work of Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Binyavanga Wainaina (Kenya), Chris Abani, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani and A. Igoni Barrett (Nigeria), Cartwright shows how these different kinds of imaginaries are combined, contrasted and ironized in literary texts. By analyzing Africa-based representations of 'the global', from the millennium period onward, this book considers how global imaginaries are shaped by and inflect distinctive regional experiences, including of postcoloniality, Structural Adjustment, oil economics, multilingualism and humanitarianism.

Departing from more extensive recent scholarship on migration narratives, the book contributes insights into literary engagements of 'the global' that arise from Nigerian and Kenyan national spaces and circumstances. It explores the narrative strategies through which alternate ideas of the global are represented, with particular emphasis on ironizing strategies, as well as the kinds of personal and political responses that the various imaginaries produce in characters.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. 'The illusion of affluence': Global overwhelm in Chris Abani's Graceland (2004)
2. 'What kind of ants had built them': Dramatic irony and the impersonal global scale in Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Wizard of the Crow (2006)
3. 'Lovers in distant lands': 419 as parody in Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani's I Do Not Come To You By Chance (2009)
4. 'Reality TV Nigerian-style': Humanitarian global publics in Binyavanga Wainaina's 'Ships in High Transit' (2007) and Beyond River Yei (2006)
5. 'Gentlemen, we can rebuild him': Disciplinary globalization and the faux-naif voice in Binyavanga Wainaina's One Day I Will Write About This Place (2011)
6. '[S]how him up as an impostor': Global enclaves and metafictional figures in A. Igoni Barrett's Blackass (2015)

Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 05 Mar 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 240
ISBN 9798765109748
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Series Black Literary and Cultural Expressions
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Penny Cartwright

Penny Cartwright is a Leverhulme Early Career Rese…

Series Editor

Abimbola Adelakun

Abimbola Adelakun is Assistant Professor in the De…

Series Editor

Toyin Falola

Toyin Falola is Professor of History, University D…

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