Narrating Imprisonment in Petina Gappah's the Book of Memory And Ngugi Wa Thiongo's Detained: A Writer's Prison Diary
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UoK
Abstract
Prison narratives have emerged as a distinct genre within global literature, offering
profound insights into the lived realities of confinement. Although imprisonment has
existed for centuries, the narrated experiences of detained writer’s have not been
subjected to sufficient literary scholarly inquiry. This study investigates the challenges
associated with incarceration of writer inmates and strategies adopted by them to cope
with their circumstances. The objectives of this research are to examine the artistic
representation of prison life in the selected texts, to discuss the characters’ psychological
frame as reflected by prison life in the selected texts, and to explore themes projecting the
dehumanizing nature of prison life in the selected texts. The study adopts Karl Marx’s
Marxist Literary Criticism, advanced by Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Friedrich Engels
(1820–1895), as a lens through which to interrogate the socio-economic and ideological
dimensions of incarceration in the selected texts. It also employs Psychoanalytic Literary
Theory, proposed by Sigmund Freud (1856–1939), to explore the psychological depths of
the characters and decode their mental and emotional responses to imprisonment.
Utilizing a qualitative descriptive research design, the study emphasizes description,
interpretation, and the in-depth understanding of meanings embedded within the chosen
literary works. The findings strife to make a modest contribution to the existing
scholarship on prison narratives. The study illuminates the authors’ depiction of the core
elements of prison life, examines the psychological toll of incarceration on the characters,
and ultimately reveals cognitive freedom as a powerful means of transcending the
constraints of mental imprisonment.
Description
A Thesis Submitted to the Board of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment for the Requirements of the Conferment of the Degree of Master of Arts in Literature of the University of Kabianga
