Thursday, 30 December 2021

Thinking Activity: Petals of Blood


Hello friends!

As a part of our syllabus we are studying a paper of African Literature. In this paper we are studying the novel "Petals of the Blood" by Ngugi Wa Thiong'oThis blog is a part of thinking activity given by our teacher at Department of English, MKBU.

Petals of Blood: Brief Overview



Petals of Blood is the fourth novel written by Ngugi wa Thiong'o, who is more commonly known simply as Ngugi. The novel describes the inequality, hypocrisy, and betrayal of peasants and workers in post-independence Kenya. As with Ngugi's other works, many of the events depicted in the novel have their basis in historical and social fact. The work is a damning indictment of the corruption and greed of Kenya's political, economic, and social elite who, after the struggle for freedom from British rule, have not returned the wealth of the land to its people but rather perpetuate the social injustice and economic inequality that were a feature of colonial oppression. In addition to criticizing this neocolonialism, the novel is also a bitter critique of the economic system of capitalism and its destructive, alienating effects on traditional Kenyan society.

The deeply political novel takes the form of a detective story. Three prominent industrialists in the town of Ilmorog in north-central Kenya have been murdered, and four suspects are questioned by the police. These four are the protagonists of the novel, whose interrelated stories are recounted against the background of Kenya's past and present. The shifting perspectives and timeline of the novel reinforce the sense of dislocation and disorientation of the once proud community of villagers who now struggle against the indignities of the neocolonial world.

The publication of Petals of Blood disturbed many of Kenya's leaders when it appeared in 1977, but the government did not formally denounce the novel. However, less than a year after it appeared Ngugi was imprisoned for his play I Will Marry When I Want. That work makes even more explicit the comparison between post-independence Kenyan leaders and British rulers.

Some commentators have faulted Ngugi for the novel's heavy-handed treatment of its message, the intrusive authorial voice, and the outdated socialist solution he offers for his country's ills. However, critics agree that Petals of Blood is an important contribution to world literature. Its admirers view it as an ambitious work that presents with artistic integrity Ngugi's statement of his social and political philosophy, and find it to be a realistic portrayal of the postcolonial experience in Kenya.


                  (Video-Full Summary of Petals of Blood👆)

Summary of Chapter 1

1.Munira had come from a vigil on the mountain when the police come for him, saying he is wanted at the Ilmorog police station for questioning about recent murders.

2. Abdulla is also approached, and he is locked in a cell at the station.

3. Wanja is at the hospital and a doctor says the police cannot see her because she is delirious.

4. Karega is asleep when the police come and bring him to the station. People gather outside, thinking he is in trouble for last night’s decision to strike, but the police say it is about murder.

5. The headline reads that Mzigo, Chui, and Kimeria, African directors of the Theng’eta Breweries and Enterprises Ltd., were burnt to death last night, and murder is suspected.

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