SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Yesha Bhatt
Department of English, M. K.
Bhavnagar University
NgũgĩwaThiong'o
1938
 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o is a Kenyan writer wjo
primarily writes in Gikuyu (language being spoken
in a part of Kenya)
 His work includes novels, plays, short stories, and
essays, ranging from literary and social criticism to
children's literature.
 He is the founder and editor of the Gikuyu-
language journal Mũtĩiri.
 Ngũgĩ has frequently been regarded as a likely
candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
 In the United States, he is currently Distinguished
Professor of Comparative Literature and English at
the University of California, Irvine
Petals of
Blood
 A novel first published in 1977
 Background of Mau Mau rebellion
 Characters are living in a small village
Ilmoro, Kenya
 They are struggling with the new developing
or westernizing Kenya
 Change in Kenya after getting independence
from Colonial rule
 The challenges of capitalism, politics, and the
effects of westernization.
 The characters are connected with the
reference of their past
 This is the first novel of Ngugi wa Thiongo
Mau Mau rebellion
 Mau Mau rebellion (1952-1960) was a war in the
British Kenya Colony (1920–1963) between
the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (KLFA), also
known as Mau Mau, and the British authorities.
 Dominated by the Kikuyu people, Meru
people and Embu people, the KLFA also
comprised units of Kamba and Maasai peoples
who fought against the white European colonist-
settlers in Kenya, the British Army
 the rebellion survived until after Kenya's
independence from Britain, driven mainly by
the Meru units
 Suppressing the Mau Mau Uprising in the Kenyan
colony cost Britain £55 million and caused at least
11,000 deaths among the Mau Mau and other
forces
Characters
Munira Wanja
Abdulla
Kimeria
Mzigo Chui
Karega
Nyakinyua
Characters
 Munira – Schoolteacher goes Ilmorog to
teach
 Karega – Works a teaching assistant –
connects to socialism after Nairobi trip –
joins the struggle of liberation
 Wanja – granddaughter of Nyakinyua –
barmaid – prostitute – Theng’eta seller –
love relationship with Munira, Karega and
Abdulla
 Abdulla – Shopkeeper lost his leg in Mau
Mau rebellion – fond of his shop and
donkey – Joseph (a boy whom he keeps
as brother)
 Nyakinyua – Old lady of the
village – tells stories of past
glory of Africa
 Kimeria – Businessman –
Kenya elite
 Chui – Schoolboy –
headmaster – educationalist
 Nderi wa Riera – Local
politician of Ilmorog village
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 (Beginning ) Then novel moves back with the arrival of Munira in the village
Ilmorog as a school teacher – he suffers from poor class attendance -
villagers think he would soon leave the village but did not – befriends with
Abdulla (owner of Bar – immigrant to Ilmorog - 1963)
 Past of Characters –
 1) Munira: wealthy Christian – strict father – wanted to do something on his
own
 2) Abdulla: adopted son Joseph – for new start – opened a barshop –
connected with Mau Mau rebellion – lost his one leg
 3) Wanja: to stay near to her Grandmother – barmaid at Abdulla’s shop –
Kimeria seduced her – was having child and abandon it – wants to become
mother again
 4) Karega: to connect with Munira – recalls Chui (popular student and then
headmaster – Karega has shared past with Munira
 Novel starts with the description of main characters Munira, Karega, Wanja, Abdullah .
 (Ending) There are deaths of three Kenyans, two businessmen (Kimeria and Mzigo) and
an educator (Chui) – Munira is accused for the murders of these people
Plot
Plot
 Wanja (granddaughter of Nyakinyua – got pregnant with Kimeria –
abandoned her child and came to Ilmorog) arrives and starts working
with Abdulla in his Bar and helps him to expand it. Munira and Wanja
fell in love with each other
 Karega arrives too and soon after that Wanja learns that
Munira is married and in despair she leaves the village
 Weather become harsh and there was no rain in the
village – harvest was not possible – Karega
encouraged villagers – took them to Nairobi – to talk
with their MP (Nderi wa Riera)
 For Joseph (adopted brother of Abdulla), the
journey was not suitable – Abdulla and
Nyakinyua were telling the story of history of
Kenya which inspired Karega – the minister sent
villagers away by thinking that they are beggars
– Kimeria questions villagers - reveals that he
is connected with MP – blackmails and rapes
Wanja
 Munira, Abdulla and Karega sent for trials and a lawyer offered help
whom Wanja knew – Media started taking interest and they got
enough donations and MP’s attention for his own sake
 Back in the village there was a strong rain – good
harvest – Wanja was reflecting the beauty with
nature – Nyakinyua taught all four how to make
Theng’eta – Karega and Wanja fell in love
 Night of revelations: Karega learned that
his brother was with Abdulla in Mau Mau
rebellion - was betrayed and hanged –
Karega joined school
 Karega was having love relation with
Munira’s sister – reason of her suicide –
Munira was already jealous of Karega
and Wanja
 Karega left the village in despair
 Wanja got upset with this
 Village was developing and getting converted into town because
of investment of neo-colonial forces – African politicians - roads
 It has become a tourist destination because of
Theng’eta – Abdulla and Wanja started selling it in
the bar nd people liked it
 Munira was observing this and was lusting for Wanja
– Karenga returned after a year – Nyakinyua died –
shock of loosing land – Wanja and Abdulla sold their
share of bar to Mzigo – he thrown out them and took
both the things
 Wanja started a whorehouse – attracted Chui, Mzigo
and Kimeria (African directors)
 Munira started believing in Christian fantacism –
went to Wanja to convince her but she denied
 Abdulla was happy with Joseph and fell in love with
Wanja and she conceived his child
 Karega planed strike – Mzigo, Kimeria and Chui went
to meet him and then to Wanja’s whorehouse
 Wanja wanted to take revenge to the men who done wrong with her and Abdulla
 She called all three men to her whorehouse and kept them in three different rooms –
Abdulla was also supporting in this
 Wanja killed Kimeria with a weapon
 Munira decided to take revenge and put fire in the
whorehouse
 Inspector investigated and Munira
confessed his crime – sent for trial
 Karega was detained but
was determined to Kenya
 Wanja was happy with
the child in her womb
Title of the Novel
 Petals of Blood is derived from the poem The Swamp
by Sir Derek Walcott
 The poem is about the nature and how it can be
destructive – how humans should adjust with nature
(Horrors of death – hopelessness)
 The phrase is used initially by a student in Munira’s
lecture to describe a flower but he corrects the lad
stating: “…there is no color called blood…”
 The phrase is also used to describe Munira’s sexual
fantasy, Virginity, and flames.
 In this novel nature plays an essential role – it leads
characters to explore new world which is changing
rapidly with the tag of ‘modernization’
 Connected with the epigraph of the novel
Themes
Neocolonialism Love and Passion
- Freedom from colonial power
- Started establishing their own
government and control over economy
- Colonizers and elite Africans were
investing in these businesses
- Market loans – transportation charges
– local corruptions
- Neocolonialism
- Illusion of having power – but power
was of with money and money was of
with investors – ultimate colonialism
- Unhealthy love relationship – passion was
there to harm the other
- Munira is obsessed with Wanja
- Kimeria was obsessed with Wanja
- Wanja was in love with Kimeria first then
Munira (Married), then Karega (who left
her) and in the end with Abdulla (who’s
child she was carrying)
- Karega loved her but wanted to develop
his consciousness towards the
contemporary scenario
- Abdulla can be considered as true lover
Themes
Value of Human life Community and Brotherhood
- Life of Town
- Priest denied to support villagers and
the child Joseph
- Kimeria harassed them and raped
Wanja
- MP is also ignoring the people
- Representation of human life’s value
for Elite people
- All started helping when media covered
the story – For their own benefits they
helped poor
- Value of individual is value of
community
- Villagers can only develop their village
- Collective efforts
- Part of wider Africa and Third world
community
- Only collective efforts of people can
help to save their culture – people and
freedom
- Journey to Nairobi
Themes
Local and Global struggle
- Story of a small village Ilmorog, but it
can be the story of any colonized
country and its village
- Struggle is the same
- Ilmorog suggests Kenya – Africa or any
country which was colonized
- First the struggle was at local level
- Modernization made it a global struggle
- Fight with local level corruption
- Fight with global level corruption
Themes
Christianity Education
- Spread the value of Christianity
- Power of colonizers
- A religion that dominated people with
colonial and neo-colonial powers
- Eg. Rev. Jerrod (Prist who did not help
villagers) and Ezekieli (father of Munira
– who got impressed with foreigners)
- Munira’s decision to embrace
Christianity – his obsession and
selfishness
- Complex view of education
- Wanja was not able to finish the school
– became barmaid
- Her insistence to make Joseph an
educated man
- Education - when it is shaped by
foreigner
- No history – culture or problems are
defined well
Wanja as symbol
- Wanja represents new Africa –
emerging Kenya
- Wanja – from a school girl – barmaid –
whore – mother
- She struggles and develops with the
changing circumstances
- Just to stand with the new changes she
modified her priorities
- She rapidly started accepting the
changes
- Her condition represents African
woman
- Death of Wanja’s child – death of
Kenya children
- Kenya and Africa have a history of
'murdering' their children
- Second child – new hope for Kenya
Africa
History, Intertextuality, and Gender in Ngugi’s
Petals of Blood
- Two kinds of historical struggles
- 1. Black World historical
struggle
- Colonialism – marginalization –
constant war – struggle for their
rights
- 2. Kenyan national struggle
- (generational struggle)
- Decolonizing nationalism – Neo-
colonialism – support of
colonizers
- Rejecting the ideology of
Christianity
- History of female struggle –
history of prostitute
- Patriarchal society – place of
female
- Revenge of Wanja – her infant
- Struggle of female in new Kenya
- Concept of ‘working women’
- Sexual exploitation from
childhood – Wanja
- Craving for child and
motherhood
- Born of New Kenya – Infant of
Wanja
Re-Historicizing the Conflicting figure of female
 Wanja – as strong woman character
 Power to construct her own destiny
 School girl – Kimeria’s child –
thrown out of school
 Mother – dead child
 Barmaid – Skilled woman - profit
 Lover – Karega – Munira - Abdulla
 Partner in business (business
woman) – Theng’eta production
 Prostitute – tragic condition
 Murderer – Murder of Kimeria
 Mother – Abdulla’s child
 Wanja as tradition breaker – away
from typical woman of literature
 Wanja is not passive –
melodramatic – typical male-
dependant heroine figure
 Drought – Female womb
 Rain – arrival of baby
 Wanja – feminist point of view –
as rising land of Kenya –
connection with mother nature –
Development of her character with
the development of Kenya
- Independence of Kenya and Neo-
colonialism
- Loss of independence – despair
- Fanonism – anti-colonial liberationist
criticism – Violence is constructive force
- No other way than violence for
decolonization
- When it is against injustice
- New Ilmorog was emerging – No respect
for people who died for the nation
- Capitalism is controlling everything
Fanonism and constructiveviolence
Postmodernism in Petals of Blood
 Connection of Colonial and Post-colonial
 Historical and cultural repositioning
 Hybridity’s imagined threat to cultural purity -
Transformation of a village
 Ambivalence – Nyankinyua v/s Wanja – two
generations
 As Nyakinyua, a heroic old woman, exclaimed
‘Our soil seems tired’ and Njuguna argued
‘Mwathi wa Mugo seems to be losing his
power over the rains’
 Peasants converting themselves to
Christianity
 Mimicking the colonizer
 Ideology – Female representation –
superstition- folk tales – struggle -
individuality
Petals of blood

More Related Content

What's hot

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...Jheel Barad
 
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr Mangesh Gore
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr  Mangesh GorePPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr  Mangesh Gore
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr Mangesh GoremangeshGore5
 
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhys
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhyswide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhys
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhysSneha Agravat
 
Symbols in Midnight's Children
Symbols in Midnight's ChildrenSymbols in Midnight's Children
Symbols in Midnight's ChildrenDilip Barad
 
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian Barnes
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian BarnesMemory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian Barnes
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian BarnesDilip Barad
 
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptx
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptxGroup Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptx
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptxNilay Rathod
 
sem4 comparative study.pptx
sem4 comparative study.pptxsem4 comparative study.pptx
sem4 comparative study.pptxKhushbumakwana3
 
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of Blood
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of BloodFanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of Blood
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of BloodAsari Bhavyang
 
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptx
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptxThree prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptx
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptxNilay Rathod
 
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati RoyThe Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati RoyTrushali Dodiya
 
An Introduction​ by Kamala Das
An Introduction​ by Kamala DasAn Introduction​ by Kamala Das
An Introduction​ by Kamala DasRiddhi Bhatt
 
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 Years
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 YearsRabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 Years
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 YearsAsari Bhavyang
 

What's hot (20)

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE IN INDIA: overview of its history by Subha Chakraborty...
 
Unit 1 Research and Writing
Unit 1 Research and WritingUnit 1 Research and Writing
Unit 1 Research and Writing
 
The Home and The World
The Home and The WorldThe Home and The World
The Home and The World
 
Tools for Reading Myths - Peter Struck
Tools for Reading Myths - Peter StruckTools for Reading Myths - Peter Struck
Tools for Reading Myths - Peter Struck
 
Northrop Frye
Northrop FryeNorthrop Frye
Northrop Frye
 
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr Mangesh Gore
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr  Mangesh GorePPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr  Mangesh Gore
PPT on Diaspora literature of Jhumpa Lahiri by Dr Mangesh Gore
 
The empire writes back
The empire writes backThe empire writes back
The empire writes back
 
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhys
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhyswide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhys
wide_sargasso_sea_by_jean_rhys
 
Symbols in Midnight's Children
Symbols in Midnight's ChildrenSymbols in Midnight's Children
Symbols in Midnight's Children
 
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian Barnes
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian BarnesMemory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian Barnes
Memory Novel - Theme of Memory and History - The Only Story - Julian Barnes
 
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptx
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptxGroup Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptx
Group Presentation on The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.pptx
 
Difference between MLA 7th and 8th Edition
Difference between MLA 7th and 8th EditionDifference between MLA 7th and 8th Edition
Difference between MLA 7th and 8th Edition
 
sem4 comparative study.pptx
sem4 comparative study.pptxsem4 comparative study.pptx
sem4 comparative study.pptx
 
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of Blood
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of BloodFanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of Blood
Fanonism And Constructive Violence in Petals of Blood
 
A Grain of Wheat
A Grain of WheatA Grain of Wheat
A Grain of Wheat
 
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptx
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptxThree prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptx
Three prose writers_ Radhakrishnan, Raghunathan and Nirad Chaudhuri.pptx
 
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati RoyThe Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
 
Citation
CitationCitation
Citation
 
An Introduction​ by Kamala Das
An Introduction​ by Kamala DasAn Introduction​ by Kamala Das
An Introduction​ by Kamala Das
 
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 Years
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 YearsRabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 Years
Rabindranath Tagore Poem Deeno Daan Goes Viral At 120 Years
 

Similar to Petals of blood

Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....
Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....
Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....KatariyaGhanshyam
 
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp Drellers
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp DrellersTradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp Drellers
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp DrellersDharaVirani
 
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dweller
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp DwellerConflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dweller
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dwellersolankipintu
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature Hazel May
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptx
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptxPetals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptx
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptxRajeshvariba Rana
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
Things fall apart by Chinua Achebe
Things fall apart by Chinua AchebeThings fall apart by Chinua Achebe
Things fall apart by Chinua AchebeUrvi Dave
 
African Literature
African Literature African Literature
African Literature Nisha Dhiman
 
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'mitalbarayjada
 
Feminist Prospect in petals of blood
Feminist Prospect in petals of bloodFeminist Prospect in petals of blood
Feminist Prospect in petals of bloodHirvapandya1
 
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'Trushali Dodiya
 
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'O
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'OA Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'O
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'OTrushali Dodiya
 
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision: 'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision:  'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision:  'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision: 'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...Jheel Barad
 
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraOnce Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraAvniDave1
 
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraOnce Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraAvniDave1
 

Similar to Petals of blood (20)

Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....
Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....
Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Portrayal of the Proletarianization of the Kenyan Masses....
 
A Grain of Wheat
A Grain of WheatA Grain of Wheat
A Grain of Wheat
 
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp Drellers
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp DrellersTradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp Drellers
Tradition v/s Modernity in The Swamp Drellers
 
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dweller
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp DwellerConflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dweller
Conflict of Tradition and Modernity in Swamp Dweller
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature
A Glimpse of Kenya and Its Literature
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptx
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptxPetals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptx
Petals of Blood by Ngugi wa Thiong'o_African Literature.pptx
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
Things fall apart by Chinua Achebe
Things fall apart by Chinua AchebeThings fall apart by Chinua Achebe
Things fall apart by Chinua Achebe
 
African Literature
African Literature African Literature
African Literature
 
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'
Information about ' A Grain of Wheat'
 
Feminist Prospect in petals of blood
Feminist Prospect in petals of bloodFeminist Prospect in petals of blood
Feminist Prospect in petals of blood
 
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'
 
Andrew-Nyongesa (1).pdf
Andrew-Nyongesa (1).pdfAndrew-Nyongesa (1).pdf
Andrew-Nyongesa (1).pdf
 
Chinua achebe
Chinua achebe Chinua achebe
Chinua achebe
 
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'O
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'OA Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'O
A Postcolonial Critique of 'Petals of Blood' by Ngugi Wa Thiong'O
 
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision: 'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision:  'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision:  'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...
Gabriel Okara's Postcolonial Vision: 'You Laughed and Laughed and Laughed' a...
 
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraOnce Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
 
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel OkaraOnce Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
Once Upon a Time by Gabriel Okara
 

More from Dr. Yesha Bhatt

More from Dr. Yesha Bhatt (20)

Academic writing
Academic writingAcademic writing
Academic writing
 
For Whom the Bell Tolls.pptx
For Whom the Bell Tolls.pptxFor Whom the Bell Tolls.pptx
For Whom the Bell Tolls.pptx
 
Victorian - Romantic Age
Victorian - Romantic Age Victorian - Romantic Age
Victorian - Romantic Age
 
The Wretched of the Earth.pptx
The Wretched of the Earth.pptxThe Wretched of the Earth.pptx
The Wretched of the Earth.pptx
 
Long Day's Journey into Night
Long Day's Journey into NightLong Day's Journey into Night
Long Day's Journey into Night
 
A dance of the forests
A dance of the forestsA dance of the forests
A dance of the forests
 
Importance of being Ernest
Importance of being ErnestImportance of being Ernest
Importance of being Ernest
 
The Rover
The RoverThe Rover
The Rover
 
Tennyson and Browning
Tennyson and BrowningTennyson and Browning
Tennyson and Browning
 
Romantic poets works
Romantic poets worksRomantic poets works
Romantic poets works
 
Romantic poets
Romantic poetsRomantic poets
Romantic poets
 
Frankenstein
FrankensteinFrankenstein
Frankenstein
 
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean RhysWide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
 
Pride and Prejudice
Pride and PrejudicePride and Prejudice
Pride and Prejudice
 
To the light house ppt
To the light house pptTo the light house ppt
To the light house ppt
 
The waste land ppt
The waste land pptThe waste land ppt
The waste land ppt
 
History of 20th century ppt
History of 20th century pptHistory of 20th century ppt
History of 20th century ppt
 
Nobel prize in_literature
Nobel prize in_literatureNobel prize in_literature
Nobel prize in_literature
 
The Elizabethan age
The Elizabethan ageThe Elizabethan age
The Elizabethan age
 
Television – Representation of culture
Television – Representation of cultureTelevision – Representation of culture
Television – Representation of culture
 

Recently uploaded

Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdf
Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdfDanh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdf
Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdfQucHHunhnh
 
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345beazzy04
 
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesApplication of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesRased Khan
 
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptx
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptxMatatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptx
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptxJenilouCasareno
 
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...Sayali Powar
 
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.ppt
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.pptBasic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.ppt
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.pptSourabh Kumar
 
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdf
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdfAccounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdf
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdfYibeltalNibretu
 
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDF
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDFForest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDF
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDFVivekanand Anglo Vedic Academy
 
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & EngineeringBasic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & EngineeringDenish Jangid
 
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS Module
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleHow to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS Module
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
 
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6, Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6,  Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6,  Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6, Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...Denish Jangid
 
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdf
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdfHome assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdf
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdfTamralipta Mahavidyalaya
 
PART A. Introduction to Costumer Service
PART A. Introduction to Costumer ServicePART A. Introduction to Costumer Service
PART A. Introduction to Costumer ServicePedroFerreira53928
 
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptx
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptxMARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptx
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptxbennyroshan06
 
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptx
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxInstructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptx
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
 
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumers
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumersBasic phrases for greeting and assisting costumers
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumersPedroFerreira53928
 
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxCapitolTechU
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdf
Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdfDanh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdf
Danh sách HSG Bộ môn cấp trường - Cấp THPT.pdf
 
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345
Sha'Carri Richardson Presentation 202345
 
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesApplication of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
 
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptx
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptxMatatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptx
Matatag-Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills Presentation.pptx
 
Introduction to Quality Improvement Essentials
Introduction to Quality Improvement EssentialsIntroduction to Quality Improvement Essentials
Introduction to Quality Improvement Essentials
 
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...
UNIT – IV_PCI Complaints: Complaints and evaluation of complaints, Handling o...
 
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.ppt
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.pptBasic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.ppt
Basic_QTL_Marker-assisted_Selection_Sourabh.ppt
 
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdf
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdfAccounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdf
Accounting and finance exit exam 2016 E.C.pdf
 
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDF
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDFForest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDF
Forest and Wildlife Resources Class 10 Free Study Material PDF
 
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & EngineeringBasic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
 
B.ed spl. HI pdusu exam paper-2023-24.pdf
B.ed spl. HI pdusu exam paper-2023-24.pdfB.ed spl. HI pdusu exam paper-2023-24.pdf
B.ed spl. HI pdusu exam paper-2023-24.pdf
 
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS Module
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleHow to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS Module
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS Module
 
NCERT Solutions Power Sharing Class 10 Notes pdf
NCERT Solutions Power Sharing Class 10 Notes pdfNCERT Solutions Power Sharing Class 10 Notes pdf
NCERT Solutions Power Sharing Class 10 Notes pdf
 
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6, Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6,  Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6,  Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...
Basic Civil Engineering Notes of Chapter-6, Topic- Ecosystem, Biodiversity G...
 
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdf
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdfHome assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdf
Home assignment II on Spectroscopy 2024 Answers.pdf
 
PART A. Introduction to Costumer Service
PART A. Introduction to Costumer ServicePART A. Introduction to Costumer Service
PART A. Introduction to Costumer Service
 
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptx
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptxMARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptx
MARUTI SUZUKI- A Successful Joint Venture in India.pptx
 
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptx
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxInstructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptx
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptx
 
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumers
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumersBasic phrases for greeting and assisting costumers
Basic phrases for greeting and assisting costumers
 
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
 

Petals of blood

  • 1. Yesha Bhatt Department of English, M. K. Bhavnagar University
  • 2. NgũgĩwaThiong'o 1938  Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o is a Kenyan writer wjo primarily writes in Gikuyu (language being spoken in a part of Kenya)  His work includes novels, plays, short stories, and essays, ranging from literary and social criticism to children's literature.  He is the founder and editor of the Gikuyu- language journal Mũtĩiri.  Ngũgĩ has frequently been regarded as a likely candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature.  In the United States, he is currently Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and English at the University of California, Irvine
  • 3. Petals of Blood  A novel first published in 1977  Background of Mau Mau rebellion  Characters are living in a small village Ilmoro, Kenya  They are struggling with the new developing or westernizing Kenya  Change in Kenya after getting independence from Colonial rule  The challenges of capitalism, politics, and the effects of westernization.  The characters are connected with the reference of their past  This is the first novel of Ngugi wa Thiongo
  • 4. Mau Mau rebellion  Mau Mau rebellion (1952-1960) was a war in the British Kenya Colony (1920–1963) between the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (KLFA), also known as Mau Mau, and the British authorities.  Dominated by the Kikuyu people, Meru people and Embu people, the KLFA also comprised units of Kamba and Maasai peoples who fought against the white European colonist- settlers in Kenya, the British Army  the rebellion survived until after Kenya's independence from Britain, driven mainly by the Meru units  Suppressing the Mau Mau Uprising in the Kenyan colony cost Britain £55 million and caused at least 11,000 deaths among the Mau Mau and other forces
  • 6. Characters  Munira – Schoolteacher goes Ilmorog to teach  Karega – Works a teaching assistant – connects to socialism after Nairobi trip – joins the struggle of liberation  Wanja – granddaughter of Nyakinyua – barmaid – prostitute – Theng’eta seller – love relationship with Munira, Karega and Abdulla  Abdulla – Shopkeeper lost his leg in Mau Mau rebellion – fond of his shop and donkey – Joseph (a boy whom he keeps as brother)  Nyakinyua – Old lady of the village – tells stories of past glory of Africa  Kimeria – Businessman – Kenya elite  Chui – Schoolboy – headmaster – educationalist  Nderi wa Riera – Local politician of Ilmorog village
  • 7. ------------------------------------------------------------------------  (Beginning ) Then novel moves back with the arrival of Munira in the village Ilmorog as a school teacher – he suffers from poor class attendance - villagers think he would soon leave the village but did not – befriends with Abdulla (owner of Bar – immigrant to Ilmorog - 1963)  Past of Characters –  1) Munira: wealthy Christian – strict father – wanted to do something on his own  2) Abdulla: adopted son Joseph – for new start – opened a barshop – connected with Mau Mau rebellion – lost his one leg  3) Wanja: to stay near to her Grandmother – barmaid at Abdulla’s shop – Kimeria seduced her – was having child and abandon it – wants to become mother again  4) Karega: to connect with Munira – recalls Chui (popular student and then headmaster – Karega has shared past with Munira  Novel starts with the description of main characters Munira, Karega, Wanja, Abdullah .  (Ending) There are deaths of three Kenyans, two businessmen (Kimeria and Mzigo) and an educator (Chui) – Munira is accused for the murders of these people Plot
  • 8. Plot  Wanja (granddaughter of Nyakinyua – got pregnant with Kimeria – abandoned her child and came to Ilmorog) arrives and starts working with Abdulla in his Bar and helps him to expand it. Munira and Wanja fell in love with each other  Karega arrives too and soon after that Wanja learns that Munira is married and in despair she leaves the village  Weather become harsh and there was no rain in the village – harvest was not possible – Karega encouraged villagers – took them to Nairobi – to talk with their MP (Nderi wa Riera)  For Joseph (adopted brother of Abdulla), the journey was not suitable – Abdulla and Nyakinyua were telling the story of history of Kenya which inspired Karega – the minister sent villagers away by thinking that they are beggars – Kimeria questions villagers - reveals that he is connected with MP – blackmails and rapes Wanja
  • 9.  Munira, Abdulla and Karega sent for trials and a lawyer offered help whom Wanja knew – Media started taking interest and they got enough donations and MP’s attention for his own sake  Back in the village there was a strong rain – good harvest – Wanja was reflecting the beauty with nature – Nyakinyua taught all four how to make Theng’eta – Karega and Wanja fell in love  Night of revelations: Karega learned that his brother was with Abdulla in Mau Mau rebellion - was betrayed and hanged – Karega joined school  Karega was having love relation with Munira’s sister – reason of her suicide – Munira was already jealous of Karega and Wanja  Karega left the village in despair  Wanja got upset with this
  • 10.  Village was developing and getting converted into town because of investment of neo-colonial forces – African politicians - roads  It has become a tourist destination because of Theng’eta – Abdulla and Wanja started selling it in the bar nd people liked it  Munira was observing this and was lusting for Wanja – Karenga returned after a year – Nyakinyua died – shock of loosing land – Wanja and Abdulla sold their share of bar to Mzigo – he thrown out them and took both the things  Wanja started a whorehouse – attracted Chui, Mzigo and Kimeria (African directors)  Munira started believing in Christian fantacism – went to Wanja to convince her but she denied  Abdulla was happy with Joseph and fell in love with Wanja and she conceived his child  Karega planed strike – Mzigo, Kimeria and Chui went to meet him and then to Wanja’s whorehouse
  • 11.  Wanja wanted to take revenge to the men who done wrong with her and Abdulla  She called all three men to her whorehouse and kept them in three different rooms – Abdulla was also supporting in this  Wanja killed Kimeria with a weapon  Munira decided to take revenge and put fire in the whorehouse  Inspector investigated and Munira confessed his crime – sent for trial  Karega was detained but was determined to Kenya  Wanja was happy with the child in her womb
  • 12. Title of the Novel  Petals of Blood is derived from the poem The Swamp by Sir Derek Walcott  The poem is about the nature and how it can be destructive – how humans should adjust with nature (Horrors of death – hopelessness)  The phrase is used initially by a student in Munira’s lecture to describe a flower but he corrects the lad stating: “…there is no color called blood…”  The phrase is also used to describe Munira’s sexual fantasy, Virginity, and flames.  In this novel nature plays an essential role – it leads characters to explore new world which is changing rapidly with the tag of ‘modernization’  Connected with the epigraph of the novel
  • 13. Themes Neocolonialism Love and Passion - Freedom from colonial power - Started establishing their own government and control over economy - Colonizers and elite Africans were investing in these businesses - Market loans – transportation charges – local corruptions - Neocolonialism - Illusion of having power – but power was of with money and money was of with investors – ultimate colonialism - Unhealthy love relationship – passion was there to harm the other - Munira is obsessed with Wanja - Kimeria was obsessed with Wanja - Wanja was in love with Kimeria first then Munira (Married), then Karega (who left her) and in the end with Abdulla (who’s child she was carrying) - Karega loved her but wanted to develop his consciousness towards the contemporary scenario - Abdulla can be considered as true lover
  • 14. Themes Value of Human life Community and Brotherhood - Life of Town - Priest denied to support villagers and the child Joseph - Kimeria harassed them and raped Wanja - MP is also ignoring the people - Representation of human life’s value for Elite people - All started helping when media covered the story – For their own benefits they helped poor - Value of individual is value of community - Villagers can only develop their village - Collective efforts - Part of wider Africa and Third world community - Only collective efforts of people can help to save their culture – people and freedom - Journey to Nairobi
  • 15. Themes Local and Global struggle - Story of a small village Ilmorog, but it can be the story of any colonized country and its village - Struggle is the same - Ilmorog suggests Kenya – Africa or any country which was colonized - First the struggle was at local level - Modernization made it a global struggle - Fight with local level corruption - Fight with global level corruption
  • 16. Themes Christianity Education - Spread the value of Christianity - Power of colonizers - A religion that dominated people with colonial and neo-colonial powers - Eg. Rev. Jerrod (Prist who did not help villagers) and Ezekieli (father of Munira – who got impressed with foreigners) - Munira’s decision to embrace Christianity – his obsession and selfishness - Complex view of education - Wanja was not able to finish the school – became barmaid - Her insistence to make Joseph an educated man - Education - when it is shaped by foreigner - No history – culture or problems are defined well
  • 17. Wanja as symbol - Wanja represents new Africa – emerging Kenya - Wanja – from a school girl – barmaid – whore – mother - She struggles and develops with the changing circumstances - Just to stand with the new changes she modified her priorities - She rapidly started accepting the changes - Her condition represents African woman - Death of Wanja’s child – death of Kenya children - Kenya and Africa have a history of 'murdering' their children - Second child – new hope for Kenya Africa
  • 18. History, Intertextuality, and Gender in Ngugi’s Petals of Blood - Two kinds of historical struggles - 1. Black World historical struggle - Colonialism – marginalization – constant war – struggle for their rights - 2. Kenyan national struggle - (generational struggle) - Decolonizing nationalism – Neo- colonialism – support of colonizers - Rejecting the ideology of Christianity - History of female struggle – history of prostitute - Patriarchal society – place of female - Revenge of Wanja – her infant - Struggle of female in new Kenya - Concept of ‘working women’ - Sexual exploitation from childhood – Wanja - Craving for child and motherhood - Born of New Kenya – Infant of Wanja
  • 19. Re-Historicizing the Conflicting figure of female  Wanja – as strong woman character  Power to construct her own destiny  School girl – Kimeria’s child – thrown out of school  Mother – dead child  Barmaid – Skilled woman - profit  Lover – Karega – Munira - Abdulla  Partner in business (business woman) – Theng’eta production  Prostitute – tragic condition  Murderer – Murder of Kimeria  Mother – Abdulla’s child  Wanja as tradition breaker – away from typical woman of literature  Wanja is not passive – melodramatic – typical male- dependant heroine figure  Drought – Female womb  Rain – arrival of baby  Wanja – feminist point of view – as rising land of Kenya – connection with mother nature – Development of her character with the development of Kenya
  • 20. - Independence of Kenya and Neo- colonialism - Loss of independence – despair - Fanonism – anti-colonial liberationist criticism – Violence is constructive force - No other way than violence for decolonization - When it is against injustice - New Ilmorog was emerging – No respect for people who died for the nation - Capitalism is controlling everything Fanonism and constructiveviolence
  • 21. Postmodernism in Petals of Blood  Connection of Colonial and Post-colonial  Historical and cultural repositioning  Hybridity’s imagined threat to cultural purity - Transformation of a village  Ambivalence – Nyankinyua v/s Wanja – two generations  As Nyakinyua, a heroic old woman, exclaimed ‘Our soil seems tired’ and Njuguna argued ‘Mwathi wa Mugo seems to be losing his power over the rains’  Peasants converting themselves to Christianity  Mimicking the colonizer  Ideology – Female representation – superstition- folk tales – struggle - individuality