TY - JOUR
T1 - Trauma theory and nigerian civil war literature
T2 - Speaking "something that was never in words" in chris abanis song for night
AU - Dalley, Hamish
PY - 2013/9/1
Y1 - 2013/9/1
N2 - The application of trauma theory to postcolonial literature has provoked anxiety from critics concerned about its capacity to impose Eurocentric interpretations. This article evaluates the use of trauma as a paradigm for interpreting Nigerian civil war literature, examining the concept in relation to Chris Abanis 2007 child-soldier narrative Song for Night. This novels formal qualities-temporal disjunction, repetition and communicative ambivalence-signify an intertextual engagement with trauma theory, reflecting the concepts emergence as a generic framework mediating representations of history in various contexts. Far from effacing historicized detail as some claim, Abanis engagement with trauma generates an allegory of the wars significance in post-conflict Nigeria. Song for Night expresses the desire for a border-crossing perspective that would reconcile former antagonisms, while pointing to the obstacles that preclude this. Above all, the fractured subjectivity of the traumatized victim-perpetrator protagonist emerges as an emblem of the conflicts refusal to be relegated to the completed past.
AB - The application of trauma theory to postcolonial literature has provoked anxiety from critics concerned about its capacity to impose Eurocentric interpretations. This article evaluates the use of trauma as a paradigm for interpreting Nigerian civil war literature, examining the concept in relation to Chris Abanis 2007 child-soldier narrative Song for Night. This novels formal qualities-temporal disjunction, repetition and communicative ambivalence-signify an intertextual engagement with trauma theory, reflecting the concepts emergence as a generic framework mediating representations of history in various contexts. Far from effacing historicized detail as some claim, Abanis engagement with trauma generates an allegory of the wars significance in post-conflict Nigeria. Song for Night expresses the desire for a border-crossing perspective that would reconcile former antagonisms, while pointing to the obstacles that preclude this. Above all, the fractured subjectivity of the traumatized victim-perpetrator protagonist emerges as an emblem of the conflicts refusal to be relegated to the completed past.
KW - Chris Abani
KW - Nigerian literature
KW - child-soldier narratives
KW - postcolonial literature
KW - temporality
KW - trauma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84882885750&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17449855.2013.804000
DO - 10.1080/17449855.2013.804000
M3 - Article
SN - 1744-9855
VL - 49
SP - 445
EP - 457
JO - Journal of Postcolonial Writing
JF - Journal of Postcolonial Writing
IS - 4
ER -