Narrative Reconstruction of War History in Maaza Mengiste’s the Shadow King
Abstract
The study set out to interrogate the narrative strategies Maaza Mengiste employs in The Shadow
King to re-image and re-imagine Ethiopia as a nation. The study sought to achieve two
objectives: To interrogate the narrative techniques and aesthetic processes used to reconstruct
and re-image the history of Ethiopia and to examine and discuss the role and portrayal of women
in the second Italo-Ethiopian war as captured in the text. The study sought to prove the two
hypotheses: That the writer (re)constructs history of the second Italo-Ethiopian War by
employing a variety of narrative techniques in the text and that the text paints war as a program
that allowed Ethiopian women to claim and exercise agency by taking on hitherto masculine
roles. The writer employs a variety of narrative techniques to re-image and reconstruct the
history of the Second Italo-Ethiopian war. The study was guided by two theories: the theory of
narratives (Narratology) and Feminist criticism. The theory of Narratology guided me in
studying the narrative strategies at play in the reconstruction of the history of Ethiopia as
manifest in this novel. Feminist criticism with a specific focus on the principles of Black
feminism helped me to critically analyze the issues raised in the text concerning the role and
position of women in the second Italo-Ethiopian war which has been historically patriarchal in
nature. Feminism also helped me to examine the issue of gender relations in the text. The study
achieved its objectives and proved its hypotheses to be true. My study recommends that further
research be done on the text by interrogating how; through the narrative strategies, the text
situates itself within conflict resolution and national development discussions both in Ethiopia
and across the African continent.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- Faculty of Arts [989]
The following license files are associated with this item:

