Abstract
While African intercontinental migration to Western countries continues to receive vigorous scholarly attention in African literary studies, this article draws its focus to intracontinental migration during the 1930s and 1940s in Nadifa Mohamed’s Black Mamba Boy (2010). After the protagonist Jama loses his mother, he searches for his father across East and North Africa in a quest to solidify his brittle familial bonds. As Jama constantly refashions his kinship bonds throughout his peregrinations, familial belonging lies at the thematic core of the narrative, which necessitates a more thorough discussion of family structures alongside Mohamed’s realistic portrayal of African geographies transformed by Italian and British colonization to better analyze how kinship operates as a mode of resistance against such forces. Considering Mohamed’s exploration of familial roles in different East African societies, I argue that this novel showcases how migration paradoxically destabilizes and reshapes traditional African family systems foiled by colonial violence. It does so by portraying Africans’ creative resilience in engendering new familial/communal spaces while concomitantly dislodging geographically fixed ideas of belonging. To deploy this analysis, I combine geocriticism and Black Geographies to examine how varied spaces and places shape the characters’ identities and the familial connections they construe. In making this argument, I demonstrate that families/communities mark belonging more significantly than citizenship in the context of migration and buttress space-making for East African migrants in Mohamed’s narrative.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their generous and insightful feedback.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
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Notes on contributors
Cristovão Nwachukwu
Cristovão Nwachukwu is an Assistant Professor in the Africana and Latin American Studies Program at Colgate University. He obtained his B.A. in Portuguese and English language and literatures in 2017 from the Federal University of Bahia in Brazil and his PhD in English at the University of Florida in 2024. His research explores the representations of Black African immigrants in contemporary African novels that take place in the United States and Europe, and the impacts of racialization and trauma in African family units.