Artistic choices and gender placement in the writings of Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Grace Ogot
Abstract
This study is a stylistic investigation of the intersection between gender and artistic
choices. Its purpose is to position gender as a discursive presence upon which writing is
contingent. Emphasised throughout the thesis is that gender is a social construct. But
while accepting the invalidity of physiological determinism in the study of literature, the
thesis demonstrates the centrality of gender in determining the content and form of a
work of art. The particularity of the work in terms of gender, place, and time does not
occlude the text's universal appeal across gender, historical and geographical divides.
Focussing on the works of Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Grace Ogot, the analysis interrogates
the contention that female and male writers use linguistic and narrative signs differently.
Through a practical and critical appraisal of specific texts as opposed to abstracted
theorising within which the debate on gender and writing has largely been executed and
polemicised, the study attempts to locate the role of an author's gender in creative
choices made in the texts. Comparing the two artists, the study pays particular attention-is'\0
paid t~ the themes predominating in their works, the patterns of characterisation, and the
stylistic and technical devices each artist deploys to concretise the message of the text.
Recognising the centrality of language in aesthetic production, the study primarily uses
critical stylistics in a theoretical framework that is largely deconstructive and semiotic.
We offer linguistic account of the ideologies masked in the text. The aim is to appreciate
the aesthetic effects the selected devices generate while concretising the texts' gendered
messages. Drawing on deconstruction and semiotic textual theories, the analysis at the
reveals textual aporiae and blind spots that express duplicity in the artist's perspective on
themes and characters. This is especially when the self-deconstructive efficacy gestures
to gendered positions.
In the aggregate, the study finds out that in their works Grace Ogot and Ngugi wa
Thiong'o treat universal themes and attempt to draw round characters. Nevertheless. the
over-arching universal imperatives notwithstanding, there are localised choices that
reveal gender differences in the writers choice of themes. narrative perspectives and the
intertextual relations that they establish with prior writing. The texts they create end up
being sites of struggle in which gender ideologies are reflected. contested and mapped
out. Whether gender is a thematic concern in a text or not. it reveals its subversive
potential in the contestatory politics of rupture and resistance the writers have staged in
their writings.
Careful to avoid a male/female binary split. the study keeps within its sights the junctures
when Ngugi wa Thiongo and Grace Ogot problematise gender polarity by strategically
deploying the choices that would be associated with the opposite gender. We demonstrate
although Grace Ogot avoids artistic choices that predominate in Ngugis works. she
occasionally uses devices and treats themes more peculiarly associated with Ngugi. and
vice versa. This signals that although gender is a discursive structuring principle in art.
narrative and linguistic signs in literature cannot be compartmentalised into a rigid
male/female binary opposition. The fact that these variances between the choices Grace
Ogot and Ngugi wa Thiong'o make are mutable expresses that gendered differences in
creative writing are not absolutes but perpetually negotiated positions.
Citation
Ph.D Thesis 2002Sponsorhip
University of NairobiPublisher
Depatment of Linguistics, University of Nairobi
Description
Ph.D Thesis