Linearity And Cyclic Conception Of Time In Ngugi's Fiction: Book Analysis

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The present study’s literary investigation of Ngugi’s fiction draws heavily from Heidegger’s notions of time, temporality and historicity. According to Heidegger (1962), temporality is a unity against which past, present and future stand out as ecstasies while remaining essentially interlocked. Heidegger views ecstasies as horizons, in the sense of what limits, surrounds or encloses and in so doing discloses or makes available. The significance of the foregoing Heideggerian interpretation of temporality lies in the fact that it frees a literary historian from thinking of past, present and future as sequentially ordered groupings of distinct events. The paper utilizes this concept to unravel Ngugi’s portrayal of the efficacy of cyclic conception of …show more content…

1.2 Linearity and Cyclic Conception of Time in Ngugi’s Fiction
The current study’s investigation of conception of time in literature restricts itself to Ngugi’s treatment of official histories and his project of reconstructing the same histories to foreground authentic African realities. The novelist demonstrates that history plays a central role in crafting a people’s identity in relation to other people in the world. Karega in Petals of Blood examines the history written by African scholars so as to expose its inauthenticity. He points out such history was mute on authentic Kenyan history and the role indigenous Kenyans played in the country’s liberation. This reveals the writer’s attempt to reconstruct the history of the people he mirrors in his texts. According to Ogude (1999), Ngugi wa Thiong’o posits narrative as an agent of history because it provides the space for challenging our notions for national identities, uses of history, and ways in which they are deployed in power contestation in

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