Abstract
Jack Mapanje’s poetry is a true reflection of his society through the use of obscuring devices. These obscuring devices are necessary to ensure that the literary work reaches its intended audience in a totalitarian society. Overall, Jack Mapanje’s poetry exploits creatures from the world of nature—mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and insects—for close association with life experiences in various contexts and situations and with people he viewed with contempt and disgust and those he regarded with tenderness and compassion. He utilises them to conceptualize and construct a wide range of ideas that respond to questions of justice, identity and belonging. It all thus becomes part of ecocriticism which is defined by various authors as ‘the study of the relationship between literature and the physical environment’. This eco-critical reading, the use of animal imagery in his poetry makes it stand apart and ahead of other resistance poetry and makes new statements about the relationships between animals, poetry and political resistance in African literature. Mapanje’s poetry is a direct response and a stance of resistance to social injustice, especially the debasement of culture, abuse of power, despotism, oppression and exploitation of the masses by the hegemonic regime of Dr. Hastings in Malawi that leads to his incarceration and final forced flight from his motherland. This paper attempts to showcase the nature of poetic expressions produced in a repressive society.
Highlights
Volume: 6 Issue: 7 life experiences in various contexts and situations and with people he viewed with contempt and Special Issue on Language & Literature disgust and those he regarded with tenderness and compassion
It all becomes part of ecocriticism which is defined by various authors as ‘the study of the relationship between literature and the physical environment’
Mapanje’s poetry is a direct response and a stance of resistance to social injustice, especially the debasement of culture, abuse of power, despotism, oppression and exploitation of the masses by the hegemonic regime of Dr Hastings in Malawi that leads to his incarceration and final forced flight from his motherland
Summary
Volume: 6 Issue: 7 life experiences in various contexts and situations and with people he viewed with contempt and Special Issue on Language & Literature disgust and those he regarded with tenderness and compassion. What Gibbs does not mention or fully comprehend is the fact that at the time of the poem’s publication, Malawi was still gripped by Banda’s oppressive rule and the poem would not have been published if it were in any way regarded as being critical of the Banda regime.
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More From: International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature
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