The
novel ‘A grain of wheat’ is Ngugi wa Thiongo’s third novel. The novel has Marxist
and Fanonian militant attitude. A Grain of Wheat is about the events
that lead up to Kenyan independence,
or Uhuru. It's set in the background of Mau Mau rebellion. The setting is a
Kenyan village. When the characters Gikonyo and Mumbi get married, in love and
just starting their lives, Gikonyo is sent to detention.
The title of the novel is taken from the New Testament, and
refers to a passage from Paul’s first letter to Corinthians which is placed as
an epicgarph at the very beginning. The action of the novel focuses on the hero’s
memory of the incidents of the ‘Mau Mau revolt, the movement began in 1946 Mau
Mau rebellion an anti – colonial movement which historians says revolt an
independence for the African nation.
The
novel stats into a small village and it give us detail about the physical,
psychological and political impact of the revolt on small village people. The
novel can be summarized as a “Collective act of recalling and reflecting on the
past” that is a narration of nation. We can also compare this novel with
European and Latin American style – especially historical novel is a vehicle to
construct a national conscience.
Uhuru movement in the Novel:
The meaning of uhuru is the central question in this novel;
it is quite far from being obvious: so much so that Ngugi clarifies what Uhuru
should be only in the 1986 version of the novel, when the former “mau mau”.
“What’s this thing called Mau Mau?”
“Mau Mau rebellion” has been known in Africa and worldwide as an anticolonial movement, it has been recorded in the
British memory and history as an atavistic and fanatic movement which resisted western modernity and
civilization.
‘A grain of wheat’
chronological the events leading up to Kenyan independence, or Uruhu, in a
Kenyan village. Gikonyo and Mumbi are newlyweds in love when Gikonyo is sent to
detention. When he comes back six years later,Mumbi has carried and given birth
to his rival’s child. Instead of talking about their trials, a wall of anger
separates them. Mumbi’s brother Kihika , a local hero, is captured and hanged
and his comrades search for the betrayer. Mugo becomes a hero through leading a
hunger strike in detention, and to town wants him to become a political leader.
Mugo, though, struggles with guilt and ultimately confesses that he betrayed
Kihika. So the whole novel shows the darker image of the African nation that
how people and woman were get tortured by someone and how rivalry takes place
into the unwanted relationships.
So, A Grain of Wheat is the third and
best known novel written by Ngugi wa Thiong'o from Kenya. It weaves several
stories together during the state of emergency in Kenya's struggle for
independence (1952–1959), focusing on the quiet Mugo, whose life is ruled by a
dark secret. The plot revolves around his home village's preparations for
Kenya's Independence Day celebration (Uhuru day). Former resistance fighters
General R and Koinandu plan on publically executing the traitor who betrayed
Kihika (a heroic resistance fighter hailing from the village) on that day. This
book is very different from its predecessor. There is no one main character,
but several. Though they interact, they each have their own issues and deal
with them in different ways. And, though the African/British divide is still
there, it is not a key. Rather the key theme, which is certainly suggested in
his two previous novels, is how the past affects the main characters and how
they can move on to a new future. It is clearly a much superior novel to its
rather simple predecessors and has become a classic of African Literature.
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