¶ … authors employ oral styles to convey the voices of individual characters and their unique jargon. Vocal inflections can be heard in print, imagined in the head as the reader loses him or herself in the novel. Kenyan author Ng-g? wa Thiong'o in his novel Devil on the Cross uses at least five different oral styles that contribute volumes to the complexity of his seminal work. The narrator begins and ends the novel with a unique oral style, as the "Prophet of Justice," providing poignant social and existential commentary: "The voice of the people is the voice of God," (p. 8). This particular narrative oral style becomes evident again from Chapter Ten onwards, at the close of the novel. Throughout Devil on the Cross, Ng-g? speaks directly to the reader, acting as a third-person omniscient point-of-view. The narrator thinking and talking to himself forms a second key oral style in Ng-g?'s work. This voice is more subtle and literary than the Prophet of Justice's oral style. A third distinct oral style is used for War?
nga, the protagonist of Devil on the Cross. From the time she tells her story to the stranger at the beginning of the novel till the end after her character's transformation, War?
nga's oral style is central to Ng-g?'s novel. Throughout the description of the Devil's Feast, Ng-g? employs a religious,...
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