Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale

This essay endeavors to read Ama Ata Aidoo’s Our Sister Killjoy with a postocolonially-inflected consciousness. It aims at demonstrating how her work could be read as a sophisticated postcolonial revision of the colonial travel narrative whereby the protagonist’s black-eyed squint operates as ‘the a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: lhoussain Simour
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Addis Ababa University 2011-12-01
Series:Ethiopian Journal of the Social Sciences and Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://10.90.104.77/index.php/EJSSH/article/view/6185
_version_ 1797798272008454144
author lhoussain Simour
author_facet lhoussain Simour
author_sort lhoussain Simour
collection DOAJ
description This essay endeavors to read Ama Ata Aidoo’s Our Sister Killjoy with a postocolonially-inflected consciousness. It aims at demonstrating how her work could be read as a sophisticated postcolonial revision of the colonial travel narrative whereby the protagonist’s black-eyed squint operates as ‘the all-seeingeye’ to subvert the historically unbroken legacy of the Orientalist ideology. It tries to demonstrate how Sissie assumes authority and voice in an act that destabilizes the traditionally established modes of western representation. It is also an investigation into how Aidoo’s text adopts processes which “undo the Eurocentrism produced by the institution of the West’s trajectory” (Gross 1996: 240) through diverse acts of resistance and ‘various strategies of subversion and appropriation’. Her counter discursive strategies of resistance are shaped up in various ways by a feminist consciousness that attempts to articulate a distinct African version of identity and preserve cultural distinctiveness.
first_indexed 2024-03-13T04:01:02Z
format Article
id doaj.art-6275b9790f5341aa8d9d00793765e849
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1810-4487
2520-582X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T04:01:02Z
publishDate 2011-12-01
publisher Addis Ababa University
record_format Article
series Ethiopian Journal of the Social Sciences and Humanities
spelling doaj.art-6275b9790f5341aa8d9d00793765e8492023-06-21T11:32:37ZengAddis Ababa UniversityEthiopian Journal of the Social Sciences and Humanities1810-44872520-582X2011-12-01111-212514010.4314/ejossah.v7i1-2.6Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Talelhoussain Simour0Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University,Fez This essay endeavors to read Ama Ata Aidoo’s Our Sister Killjoy with a postocolonially-inflected consciousness. It aims at demonstrating how her work could be read as a sophisticated postcolonial revision of the colonial travel narrative whereby the protagonist’s black-eyed squint operates as ‘the all-seeingeye’ to subvert the historically unbroken legacy of the Orientalist ideology. It tries to demonstrate how Sissie assumes authority and voice in an act that destabilizes the traditionally established modes of western representation. It is also an investigation into how Aidoo’s text adopts processes which “undo the Eurocentrism produced by the institution of the West’s trajectory” (Gross 1996: 240) through diverse acts of resistance and ‘various strategies of subversion and appropriation’. Her counter discursive strategies of resistance are shaped up in various ways by a feminist consciousness that attempts to articulate a distinct African version of identity and preserve cultural distinctiveness.http://10.90.104.77/index.php/EJSSH/article/view/6185colonial taledis(re)orienting
spellingShingle lhoussain Simour
Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
Ethiopian Journal of the Social Sciences and Humanities
colonial tale
dis(re)orienting
title Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
title_full Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
title_fullStr Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
title_full_unstemmed Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
title_short Ama Ato Aidoo’s Black-Eyed Squint and the ‘Voyage in’ Experience: Dis(re)Orienting Blackness and Subverting Colonial Tale
title_sort ama ato aidoo s black eyed squint and the voyage in experience dis re orienting blackness and subverting colonial tale
topic colonial tale
dis(re)orienting
url http://10.90.104.77/index.php/EJSSH/article/view/6185
work_keys_str_mv AT lhoussainsimour amaatoaidoosblackeyedsquintandthevoyageinexperiencedisreorientingblacknessandsubvertingcolonialtale