Picaros and Shapeshifters: The Postcolonial Picaresque Style in GauZ’s Standing Heavy
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35228Date
2024-03-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Niemi, Minna JohannaAbstract
I read GauZ’s Standing Heavy in connection with the postcolonial
picaresque style, as GauZ’s Ivorian immigrant characters are robust
survivors who see through the French system and criticize it
through their anti-idealist viewpoints. This cynical view, often disclosed through roguish language, provides the author the possibility of expressing aggression toward the unfair system and
highlighting the characters’ need to find their agency within its
unequal structures. Meanwhile, the publisher’s marketing techniques and the author’s media appearances have contributed to
the novel’s great success on the literary market; however, I argue
that the novel’s success on the market should not diminish our
understanding of its cultural criticism. Instead, the author himself
may act as a shapeshifter in the competitive cultural marketplace,
since his engagement in strategies of self-exotism exposes our
sanctimonious need as readers to expect authenticity from African
authors in Western contexts when they have to conform to Western
codes.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Niemi. Picaros and Shapeshifters: The Postcolonial Picaresque Style in GauZ’s Standing Heavy. Journal of the African Literature Association (JALA). 2024Metadata
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