Abstract
This article explores the impact of various semiotic signs as they appear in the novel Chaka by Thomas Mofolo. The article aims to analyse the signs in the novel and how they contribute to bringing meaning to the novel and the character Chaka, who is a compilation of the signs. Arguing that even though there are numerous cultures in the African context, African cultures have a commonality in the formation of symbolism and the creation of cultural identification of objects, events, people, etc. Therefore, the novel Chaka should be analysed from an African cultural perspective, rather than an individual cultural perspective. Considering the preceding assertion and the analysis of Thomas Mofolo’s novel, Chaka, this article makes use of structuralism as a theoretical framework from a cultural perspective. Signs contribute to the meaning of a novel and interrelatedly portray the character, in this case, Chaka. Structuralism looks at the links among numerous elements in the self-contained, well-organised structure of a text to understand how the text creates meaning. Semiotics promotes structuralism, that is, the ways that varied cultural structures are organised to give meaning.
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