Water as a Source of Life and Death: A Comparative Analysis of Flood Myths among the Luo and Kalenjin Communities in Kenya
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Editon Consortium Journal of Literature and Linguistic Studies
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to address the limited scholarly engagement with African flood myths,
particularly those of the Kalenjin and Luo communities of Kenya, despite their rich ecological, moral, and
cosmological insights. Existing ecocritical studies have largely privileged Western mythologies, leaving
Indigenous African narratives under-theorised within discussions of human–environment relations and
contemporary ecological crises. The study adopts a qualitative comparative methodology grounded in
ecocriticism, analysing selected oral accounts and published versions of Kalenjin and Luo flood myths
associated with Lake Bogoria and Simbi Nyaima. Close textual reading is combined with contextual
interpretation to examine symbolic representations of water and their ethical implications. The findings reveal
that in both traditions, water functions as a moral and ecological agent that simultaneously sustains life and
enacts destruction. Floods are represented as responses to human arrogance, inhospitality, and ecological
transgression, while survival and renewal are linked to humility, hospitality, and moral balance. The myths
operate as mnemonic landscapes and ethical frameworks that encode communal environmental values and
regulate human conduct toward nature. The study concludes that Kalenjin and Luo flood myths articulate an
Indigenous environmental ethic in which ecological harmony is inseparable from moral responsibility. It
recommends the integration of African oral narratives into contemporary ecocritical discourse and
environmental education, highlighting their significance in offering culturally grounded perspectives for
addressing climate change and promoting sustainable human–environment relationships.
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Citation
Langat, A. C., Anudo, C., & Kandagor, J. (2026). Water as a source of life and death: A comparative analysis of flood myths among the Luo and Kalenjin communities in Kenya. Editon consortium journal of literature and linguistic studies, 8(1), 10-19. https://doi.org/10.51317/ecjlls.v8i1.670