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Journal article

African Literature and Globalization: Semiotizing Space in a Tanzanian Novel

English
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AUC Library
Taylor & Francis Group
Africa | Eastern Africa

Globalization offers a number of challenges to social-scientific research, the most important of which is to arrive at empirical substantiations of concepts such as flow, centre-periphery and networks. In this paper, it is argued that conceptualizations of space are a useful starting point for such analyses. The authors investigate a Tanzanian novel written by Gabriel Ruhumbika, Miradi Bubu ya Wazalendo. The novel is a critique of Ujamaa Tanzania, and it sketches the life history of two Tanzanians. In the construction of the plot and the characters, extensive use is made of locally salient perceptions of space: good versus bad neighbourhoods, poor versus affluent regions. Such perceptions of space are closely tied to the identities of the characters and they attribute presupposable meanings to their activities. Thus, we see local perceptions of centres and peripheries at work, and mobility appears as a crucial feature in the organization of Ruhumbika's critique of Ujamaa. In turn,...

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