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- Title
'That Ever-Blurry Line Between Us and the Criminals': African Noir and the Ambiguity of Justice in Mũkoma Wa Ngũgĩ's Black Star Nairobi and Leye Adenle's When Trouble Sleeps.
- Authors
Naidu, Sam
- Abstract
This article, which focuses on African noir as a variety of neo-noir literature, begins by outlining the intertextual and intercultural relationships between classic noir and African noir. Thereafter, the postcolonial, postmodernist and transnational elements of African noir are described utilizing Mũkoma wa Ngũgĩ's novel Black Star Nairobi (2013) and Leye Adenle's When Trouble Sleeps (2018) as exemplars. Arguing that African noir draws on various genres and discourses, the article demonstrates how issues of socio-political justice, ontological and existential dilemmas, aesthetic concerns and the epistemological quest are rendered as ambiguous and murky. Based on a close reading of Black Star Nairobi and When Trouble Sleeps , the article concludes that the predominant chiaroscuro effect of African noir is not so much a 'dark' sensibility as one of abstruseness and poignant Afro-pessimism.
- Subjects
NOIR fiction; POSTCOLONIALISM; MYSTERY fiction; AFRICAN detective &; mystery stories; FICTION
- Publication
Forum for Modern Language Studies, 2020, Vol 56, Issue 3, p331
- ISSN
0015-8518
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/fmls/cqaa020