Mma-Tau: The Political Woman in Alex La Guma
Abstract
Guided by the formalist perspective, this article presents an evaluation of
Mma- Tau, the woman character in Time of the Butcherbird (1979), the
novel by the South African writer, Alex La Guma. It examines the
political role that she plays as well as how she is depicted to play this role,
such that there is harmony between her role and her characterization. Her
positive description as a huge, energetic woman wearing a mixture of male
and female clothing delineates as it enhances her courageous political stand
as the attire suggests a union between male and female in the struggle both
against grinding poverty in the segregated city and against forced removal
from her ancestral village. Her comparison to dark wood symbolises her
unwavering unity with fellow villagers who the government wants to uproot
from their ancestral land. As a result of her role as she leads the villagers
in their resistance against relocation to a desolate strange land, Mma- Tau is
the butcherbird of the title of the novel, which describes her as a ferocious
woman whose ferocity is usually associated with the lioness, which, like the
butcherbird, is a hunter. In her determination, focus and will lies a
conviction that, being a human creation, a political order is changeable by
human beings. In the process, she demonstrates La Guma' s deftness in
fusing her political role with her aesthetic nature, even as she embodies an
aesthetic ideal of a humane society that runs through his fictional world.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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