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<title>REPRESENTATIONS OF TRAUMA IN AFRICAN MIGRANT FICTION</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2402</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-15T18:51:08Z</dc:date>
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<title>REPRESENTATIONS OF TRAUMA IN AFRICAN MIGRANT FICTION</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2403</link>
<description>REPRESENTATIONS OF TRAUMA IN AFRICAN MIGRANT FICTION
AJIBOLA, OPEYEMI OMOWUMI
African migrant fiction, which recreates characters’ experiences at home and abroad, is&#13;
increasingly preoccupied with the representation of dystopian realities. Critical appraisals&#13;
of the fiction have largely focused on the representation of varied mobilities – migration,&#13;
exile, transnationalism and afropolitanism – without adequate attention to the depiction of&#13;
migrant characters’ experiences of traumatic stress, despite its ample representation in the&#13;
fiction. This study was, therefore, designed to examine the recreation of trauma and&#13;
characters’ responses to traumatic stress in selected African migrant fiction with a view to&#13;
establishing that traumatic experiences are not limited to characters’ natal homes.&#13;
Homi Bhabha’s model of the Postcolonial Theory and Cathy Caruth’s and Judith Herman’s&#13;
models of Trauma Theory, served as the framework. The interpretative design was used.&#13;
Ali Farah’s Little Mother (LM), Laila Lalami’s Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits&#13;
(HODP), Ben Jelloun’s Leaving Tangier (LT), Chika Unigwe’s On Black Sisters’ Street&#13;
(OBSS), Alain Mabanckou’s Blue White Red (BWR), Brian Chikwava’s Harare North (HN),&#13;
Fatou Diome’s The Belly of the Atlantic (TBA), and Noviolet Bulawayo’s We Need New&#13;
Names (WNNN) were purposively selected for their depiction of loss, trauma and suffering.&#13;
The novels were subjected to critical analysis.&#13;
Trauma in the novels is doubled-edged, aligning with the dominant estimation of trauma as&#13;
a double wound. Traumatogenic contexts and events in the postcolony as well as in the&#13;
diaspora dominate the novels. Pre-migration stressors such as unemployment, poverty and&#13;
sexual assault characterise the postcolony in LT, OBSS, HODP and TBA; while&#13;
displacement, deprivation and violence abound in WNNN, HN, LM and BWR, all leading to&#13;
characters’ experience of Continuous Traumatic Stress. Characters’ response to pre-&#13;
migration stressors in all the novels is flight. Repetitively traumatised by oppressive&#13;
poverty, displacement and the inconsistencies that define life in the postcolony, the&#13;
characters fled their fatherland for the West through legitimate and illegitimate routes. In&#13;
the diaspora, post-migration stressors are activated by characters’ experiences of&#13;
disillusionment, racism, joblessness, physical and mental assaults, unhomeliness, the&#13;
trauma of a paperless existence and the perpetual fear of police brutality. Characters’&#13;
responses to post-migration stressors range from developing Post-Traumatic Stress&#13;
Disorder (PTSD) to committing suicide. Azel in LT and the nameless protagonist in HN&#13;
experience dissolution of self and suffer from PTSD. In WNNN and LM, Tshaka Zulu, Uncle&#13;
Kojo and Axad suffer from mental illnesses, while Moussa in TBA commits suicide.&#13;
However, characters like Massala-Massala in BWR, Aunt Fostalina and Darling in WNNN,&#13;
Faten in HODP and Efe, Ama and Joyce in OBSS largely display resilience in the face of&#13;
trauma. There is recurring adoption of multiple narrative voices, symbolism and journey&#13;
motif in OBSS, LM, HODP and HN, while irony and traumatic realism are employed in LT,&#13;
WNNN, TBA and BWR.&#13;
Migrant characters’ precarious, liminal and subaltern existence, both at home and abroad,&#13;
bears witness to trauma’s mobility across space and time in African migrant fiction. This&#13;
destabilises the hegemonic conception of the West as the Promised Land.
</description>
<dc:date>2021-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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