¶ … Letter," by Mariama Ba, "Devil on the Cross," by Ngug" wa Thiongo, and "July's People," by Nadine Gordimer. Specifically, it will discuss and explain gender and family in "So Long a Letter," the aspects of Colonialism and Imperialism in "Devil on the Cross," and cultural freedom and integrity in "July's People."
THREE AFRICAN NOVELS
In "So Long a Letter," Mariama Ba writes of Ramatoulaye, a Senegalese schoolteacher in her 50s, whose husband decides to take a second wife without Ramatoulaye's knowledge. Of course, the new wife is younger and prettier than Ramatoulaye, and her husband's selfish move devastates her. The book is written in the form of a touching and emotional letter to her best friend from childhood, someone she feels she can trust. "We walked the same paths from adolescence to maturity, where the past begets the present" (Ba 1).
Family and gender are two of the most important issues in "So Long a Letter." Ramatoulaye married her husband for love, and they had a happy marriage, eventually having twelve children. She thought her position was secure, and did not even know her husband had taken another wife until a group of friends told her. She recognizes her family is never going to be the same, but she chooses to remain in the marriage to keep the family together as much as possible.
She chooses to stay married to her husband, but she is bitter and hurt. "In loving someone else, he burned his past, both morally and materially. He dared to commit such an act of disavowal" (Ba 12). Her family has been irrevocably broken, along with her heart, and she writes out her pain and...
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