Border Renegotiation and the Quest for Safe Space in Helon Habila's Travelers and Uzodinma Iweala's Speak No Evil
Student: Divine Ujunwa Okorie (Project, 2025)
Department of English and Literary Studies
University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State
Abstract
The symbolic status of border from the late twentieth century looks beyond border as a physical line, but as a social factor which conditions how individuals live in a society. Here, borders become more and more invisible, socially-oriented and affects the identity of even individuals living in the same territorial zone. The symbolic nature of border is significant in the way it makes negotiation and renegotiation possible at the border frontiers. Using border theorizations, particularly the models of Schimanski, Anzaldua, Newman and Okolie, this study interrogates the social borders in Helon Habila’s Travelers and Iweala’s Speak No Evil as offshoots of physical crossings. This study investigates the individual character’s awareness of the borders and how this awareness inspires a renegotiation, geared towards adjusting the border formations for accommodations and safe space.
Keywords
For the full publication, please contact the author directly at: divine.okorie.249192@unn.edu.ng
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Institutions
- Sokoto State University, Sokoto, Sokoto State 42
- St. Albert The Great Major Seminary, Abeokuta. (affl. To University of Benin) 1
- Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Jigawa State 4
- Tai Solarin University of Education, Ijagun, Ogun State 18
- Tansian University, Oba, Anambra State 1
- Taraba State University, Jalingo, Taraba State 32
- Temple-Gate Polytechnic, Osisioma, Abia State 1
- The Oke-Ogun Polytechnic, Saki, Oyo State 6
- The Polytechnic, Ibadan, Oyo State 13
- THOMAS ADEWUMI UNIVERSITY, OKO-IRESE, KWARA STATE 1