Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”

This article looks at the construction of space and “home” in the short story “An Ex-mas Feast” which appears in the collection of short stories Say You’re One of Them, written by the Nigerian author Uwem Akpan, published inabstracts 2008. It looks at representations of Nairobi in the Kenyan novelis...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor principal: Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline
Formato: Online
Idioma:espanhol
Editor: El Colegio de México 2016
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha:https://estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx/index.php/eaa/article/view/2176
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Estudios de Asia y África

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author Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline
author_facet Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline
author_sort Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline
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description This article looks at the construction of space and “home” in the short story “An Ex-mas Feast” which appears in the collection of short stories Say You’re One of Them, written by the Nigerian author Uwem Akpan, published inabstracts 2008. It looks at representations of Nairobi in the Kenyan novelistic genre which describe the life of the city between 1970 and 1990 as analyzed by Roger Kurtz in his book Urban Obsessions, Urban Fears: The Kenyan PostcolonialNovel in order to contextualize this short prose work. The article focuses on the changes and continuities that have been generated through representations of the city of Nairobi in the 21th century. “An Ex-mas Feast” presents the story of a street family in Nairobi. It provides an approach that is engaged with the voice of a sector which has generally been homogenized and de-historicized in the narratives of the city: the so-called chokora, street children who are living in many cities of Kenya who are considered on the one hand, as passive and marginalized subjects, victims of the Kenyan social, economic and political structure, and on the other hand, as perpetrators of crimes and generally non-productive subjects. The story can be read as an example of support of the narratives of the Kenyan postcolonial novel written between 1970 and 1990 which have tended to represent the city of Nairobi as a place of quotidian disorder, unemployment, poverty, vio-lence and juvenile delinquency. In these narratives Kenyan writers have used allegorical characters such as male criminals and female characters that deal with prostitution to portray the problems of the independent Kenya and postcolonial disillusionment. In “An Ex-mas Feast” Akpan explores these topics too. However, I argue that Akpan’s use of the children’s voices engages in a presentation of Nairobi as a place of negotiation and possibility, which differs from the approaches of postcolonial disorder and Nairobi as a place of crisis and crime as shown in the novels written between 1970 and 1990 and consequently the narrative contains different implications for the understanding of the urban space of Nairobi. Secondly, the article explores the formation of the urban space, even in cities with high social inequality and spatial polarization such as Nairobi, as not merely a consequence of the economic and political structures of the colonial and postcolonial state, but as De Certeau points out: “a product of microbe-like, singular and plural everyday practices of people who creatively remake it”. Hence, the exploration of the short story will demonstrate a family living on the street in Nairobi, from a position, apparently marginal remaking the urban order, turning the street space, a public space considered a “no place”, into their “home”, exerting the role of agents in the construction and transformation of the urban space.
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journal Estudios de Asia y África
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publisher El Colegio de México
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Terms_governing_use_and_reproduction_note Derechos de autor 2016 Estudios de Asia y África
data_source_entry/ISSN Estudios de Asia y África; Vol. 51, No. 2 (160), May-August, 2016; 413-447
Estudios de Asia y África; Vol. 51, núm. 2 (160), mayo-agosto, 2016; 413-447
2448-654X
0185-0164
spelling oai:oai.estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx:article-21762025-08-16T04:39:53Z Micro-history of a Machokosh Family: Reflections on the Construction of Space and “Home” in Nairobi through the Short Story “An Ex-mas Feast” Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast” Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline Kenya Nairobi Uwem Akpan Urban Space African Literature Espacio urbano Kenia Nairobi Uwem Akpan literatura africana This article looks at the construction of space and “home” in the short story “An Ex-mas Feast” which appears in the collection of short stories Say You’re One of Them, written by the Nigerian author Uwem Akpan, published inabstracts 2008. It looks at representations of Nairobi in the Kenyan novelistic genre which describe the life of the city between 1970 and 1990 as analyzed by Roger Kurtz in his book Urban Obsessions, Urban Fears: The Kenyan PostcolonialNovel in order to contextualize this short prose work. The article focuses on the changes and continuities that have been generated through representations of the city of Nairobi in the 21th century. “An Ex-mas Feast” presents the story of a street family in Nairobi. It provides an approach that is engaged with the voice of a sector which has generally been homogenized and de-historicized in the narratives of the city: the so-called chokora, street children who are living in many cities of Kenya who are considered on the one hand, as passive and marginalized subjects, victims of the Kenyan social, economic and political structure, and on the other hand, as perpetrators of crimes and generally non-productive subjects. The story can be read as an example of support of the narratives of the Kenyan postcolonial novel written between 1970 and 1990 which have tended to represent the city of Nairobi as a place of quotidian disorder, unemployment, poverty, vio-lence and juvenile delinquency. In these narratives Kenyan writers have used allegorical characters such as male criminals and female characters that deal with prostitution to portray the problems of the independent Kenya and postcolonial disillusionment. In “An Ex-mas Feast” Akpan explores these topics too. However, I argue that Akpan’s use of the children’s voices engages in a presentation of Nairobi as a place of negotiation and possibility, which differs from the approaches of postcolonial disorder and Nairobi as a place of crisis and crime as shown in the novels written between 1970 and 1990 and consequently the narrative contains different implications for the understanding of the urban space of Nairobi. Secondly, the article explores the formation of the urban space, even in cities with high social inequality and spatial polarization such as Nairobi, as not merely a consequence of the economic and political structures of the colonial and postcolonial state, but as De Certeau points out: “a product of microbe-like, singular and plural everyday practices of people who creatively remake it”. Hence, the exploration of the short story will demonstrate a family living on the street in Nairobi, from a position, apparently marginal remaking the urban order, turning the street space, a public space considered a “no place”, into their “home”, exerting the role of agents in the construction and transformation of the urban space. Este artículo explora la construcción del espacio y del “hogar” en el relato corto “An Ex-mas Feast”, el cual aparece en la colección de historias cortas Say You’re One of Them, del autor nigeriano Uwem Akpan, publicada en 2008, así como algunas representaciones de la ciudad de Nairobi en el género novelístico keniano que describen la vida en la ciudad entre las décadas de 1970 y 1990, analizadas críticamente por Roger Kurtz en su libro Urban Obsessions, Urban Fears: The Postcolonial Kenyan Novel. El Colegio de México 2016-05-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf application/xml https://estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx/index.php/eaa/article/view/2176 10.24201/eaa.v51i2.2176 Estudios de Asia y África; Vol. 51, No. 2 (160), May-August, 2016; 413-447 Estudios de Asia y África; Vol. 51, núm. 2 (160), mayo-agosto, 2016; 413-447 2448-654X 0185-0164 spa https://estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx/index.php/eaa/article/view/2176/2174 https://estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx/index.php/eaa/article/view/2176/2300 Derechos de autor 2016 Estudios de Asia y África
spellingShingle Kenya
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
Urban Space
African Literature
Espacio urbano
Kenia
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
literatura africana
Rasgado Blas, Jacqueline
Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title_alt Micro-history of a Machokosh Family: Reflections on the Construction of Space and “Home” in Nairobi through the Short Story “An Ex-mas Feast”
title_full Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title_fullStr Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title_full_unstemmed Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title_short Microhistoria de una familia machokosh: aproximaciones a la construcción del espacio del "hogar" en Nairobi a través del relato “An ex-mas feast”
title_sort microhistoria de una familia machokosh aproximaciones a la construccion del espacio del hogar en nairobi a traves del relato an ex mas feast
topic Kenya
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
Urban Space
African Literature
Espacio urbano
Kenia
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
literatura africana
topic_facet Kenya
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
Urban Space
African Literature
Espacio urbano
Kenia
Nairobi
Uwem Akpan
literatura africana
url https://estudiosdeasiayafrica.colmex.mx/index.php/eaa/article/view/2176
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