• Home
  • Collections
    • Agriculture and Environmental Studies
    • Arts, Media and Popular Culture
    • AWDF Publications
    • Capacity Building
    • Children's Human Rights
    • Climate Change
    • Development Studies
    • Disability Rights & Disability Studies
    • Economic Empowerment and Livelihood
    • Feminist Studies
    • Gender and Sexuality
    • Governance and Politics
    • HIV and AIDS
    • Peace Building
    • Philanthropy
    • Race, Culture, and Identity
    • Religion and Spirituality
    • Reproductive Health and Wellness
  • Photo and Video Collections
  • Sauti Centre Catalogue
  • AWDF Main Site
  • Select Language :
    Arabic Bengali Brazilian Portuguese English Espanol German Indonesian Japanese Malay Persian Russian Thai Turkish Urdu

Search by :

ALL Author Subject ISBN/ISSN Advanced Search

Last search:

{{tmpObj[k].text}}
Image of Women Characters in the Novels of Ken Walibora: Victims or Winners?

Arts, Media and Popular Culture

Women Characters in the Novels of Ken Walibora: Victims or Winners?

Gromov, Mikhail - Personal Name;
Download PDF
  • Women Characters in the Novels of Ken Walibora: Victims or Winners?

Ken Walibora, one of the most well-known and promising authors in the new generation of Swahili writers in Kenya, may well be considered as a male-centric writer, since his novels published from 1996 to 2012 feature men as their main figures. However, in all his books women characters play roles of growing importance not only in the lives of the main personages, but also in the author‟s views on the social situations described in his novels. Women in Walibora‟s books are almost exclusively portrayed as victims of cruel and unfair patriarchal society but it is their state of victim that motivates them towards the effort to elevate themselves above their second rate condition. In Siku Njema (Nice day, 1996) the main character Kongowea is inspired for life by the character of his mother, a famous singer, as well as by his school friend Vumilia, whose human virtues shape his own character when in his journeys after his mother‟s untimely death he meets a young girl Amina, driven by social calamities to the state of a prostitute, and later his dead friend‟s bride, who is rejected by the society as a “virgin widow”. These young women, nevertheless manage to overcome the ostracism of patriarchal society and build their own lives. In Ndoto ya Almasi (Almasi‟s dream, 2006) most of the women characters are victims of the social order, however, the hope is vested in the main woman character Chebosio, who, in spite of being impregnated by her own father-in-law, still manages to construct a living with the support of her husband. A new type of a woman character is drawn in Kidagaa Kimemwozea (His Small Fish has Caught a Rot, 2012) where Imani, a girl of a destitute background, rebels against the current social order, helping her sweetheart Amani to topple the dictatorial regime in an imaginary African country. This close bond between genders (female characters „salvaged‟ or assisted by the male ones) appears as the author‟s vision of the new type of gender relationship, which will help African women in reaching self-empowerment and equity.


Detail Information
Publication Information
: ., 2015
Number of Pages
-
ISBN
-
Language
English
ISSN
2309-3625
Subject(s)
African women
victims
equity
Women Characters
Swahili writers in Kenya
Self-empowerment
Winners
Description
-
Citation
-
Other Information
Type
Article
Part Of Series
-
DOI Identifier
-
Related Publications

No Related Publications available

Comments



African Women Development Fund (AWDF) Online Repository (AfriREP)
  • Collections
  • Sauti Centre Catalogue
  • AWDF Website

Contact Us

* - required fields
form to email

Search

Start your search by typing one or more keywords for title, author or subject


© 2025 — The African Women's Development Fund. All Rights Reserved

Powered by AlliedNet Systems Ltd.
Select the topic you are interested in
  • Agriculture and Environmental Studies
  • Arts, Media and Popular Culture
  • AWDF Publications
  • Capacity Building
  • Children Human Rights
  • Climate Change
  • Development Studies
  • Disability Rights & Disability Studies
  • Economic Empowerment and Livelihood
  • Feminist Studies
  • Gender and Sexuality
  • Governance and Politics
  • HIV & AIDS
  • Peace Building
  • Philanthropy
  • Race, Culture, and Identity
  • Religion and Spirituality
  • Reproductive Health and Wellness
  • Resource Toolkits
  • Women's Human Rights
Advanced Search