Facebook Pixel The writer who refused to bow | Mail & Guardian – newspaper – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com
Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

The writer who refused to bow

Mail & Guardian

|

May 30, 2025

Vashna Jagarnath explores the life, the message and the legacy of the Kenyan literary giant

- Ngugi wa Thiong'o

Ngugi wa Thiong'o has died. But if ever there was a writer who prepared us for this moment, for the refusal of forgetting, for the insistence that the spirit of resistance cannot be imprisoned, it was him.

Born in colonial Kenya in 1938, Ngugi's life was shaped from the beginning by rupture and fire. He witnessed the brutal violence of British colonial rule, the fracturing of communities under settler capitalism and the psychic wounds left by forced conversions, Christianisation, and land dispossession.

He was also shaped by the courageous resistance of the Mau Mau uprising, that great peasant revolt that has often been sanitised into nationalist myth. But Ngugi did not trade in myth. He held the truth in his hands, raw, inconvenient, luminous.

For many in the Global North, Ngugi was first encountered through the deceptively simple novels of his early career: Weep Not, Child (1964), The River Between (1965), and A Grain of Wheat (1967).

These were works written in English, in the mode of a young man taught to believe the English language was the vehicle of modernity.

But Ngugi would later reject this lie so forcefully, so completely, that it would cost him his freedom. And in doing so, he would chart one of the most radical literary and political journeys of our time, from a colonial subject to a prisoner of conscience, to a living weapon of decolonisation.

Like Frantz Fanon Ngugi took on the betrayal of predatory postcolonial elites with the same fury that he confronted colonialism. In 1977, after staging I Will Marry When I Want with villagers at Kamiriithu, a Gikuyu-language play that tore into the heart of post-independence corruption and neocolonial betrayal, Ngugi was detained without trial.

In prison, he wrote Devil on the Cross in Gikuyu, on toilet paper, using a smuggled pen. It was a defiant act not just of storytelling but of linguistic reclamation.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Gender equity remains an unfinished business

Funding, procurement targets and other matters covered at this year's WECONA event

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Queen of comedy in the Mother City

Celeste Ntuli turns personal roasts, faith and fearless storytelling into a must-see comedy experience as she takes her hit show to Cape Town

time to read

6 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Championing a visa-free Africa

The liberalisation loosens the colonial grip on African life. It allows states to maintain sovereignty while refusing to let colonial lines dictate connectivity

time to read

3 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Billions needed to sort water crisis

Joburg's Dada Morero assured residents that the city would not implement water-shedding in the same way South Africans endured load-shedding

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

CT rental tariff poses a dilemma

Increasing fees alone does not automatically fix affordability

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Sibiya flays police boss Masemola

Suspended deputy national police commissioner for crime detection Shadrack Sibiya intensified his defence before the Madlanga Commission this week, laying blame for the recent turmoil in the service on national commissioner Fannie Masemola.

time to read

4 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

SA's anti-corruption needle stalled

The release of the 2026 Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) confirms a sobering reality: South Africa's anti-corruption needle is not just stuck; it is being held back within a global context of democratic backsliding.

time to read

6 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

The Bold and the Xhosa

Mainstreaming the IsiXhosa language: The cast Loyiso MacDonald (Lazarus), Lunathi Mampofu (Zoleka), Ayakha Ntunja (Qhawe), Sisa Hewana (Hlathi) and Zenande Mfenyana (Thumeka)

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

SA's hotspots for deadly air pollution

The Highveld, Vaal Triangle and Waterberg- Bojanala areas linked to higher rates of respiratory disease and TB

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Steenhuisen faces palace revolt

Senior Democratic Alliance officials are backing Western Cape agriculture MEC Ivan Meyer to replace the party leader as agriculture minister after its April federal congress

time to read

5 mins

M&G 20 February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size