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Reading Emmanuel Jal’s War Child as spiritual autobiography

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  • Additional Information
    • Publication Information:
      Nordic Africa Research Network, 2019.
    • Publication Date:
      2019
    • Collection:
      LCC:Language and Literature
      LCC:Social Sciences
    • Abstract:
      Emmanuel Jal’s War Child: A Boy Soldier’s Story picks up on the tail end of the politicisation of Sudan’s North/South ideological divisions. Its historical setting is the Second Sudanese Civil War, during which the southern part of Sudan fights to secede from the Khartoum-led government. In this paper, I focus my reading not on the reasons for the outbreak of the war, but on the ways in which Jal’s narrative is retrospectively predicated on the conversio narrative trope. I anchor my argument on what I term the text’s imagination of the transformation of all Sudanese people from a faulty ‘before’ self to an enlightened ‘after’ self, following Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson. I am particularly interested in how Jal inflects religion and spirituality in the text and how his own self-identity lends itself to what I term the text’s conversion narrative leitmotif. I also aim to show the sense in which Jal uses his change from the indoctrinated ‘bad’ child to someone who turns to God and uses religious hip hop music as a mode of preaching the message of love, peace and unity to his compatriots.
    • File Description:
      electronic resource
    • ISSN:
      1459-9465
    • Relation:
      https://www.njas.fi/njas/article/view/452; https://doaj.org/toc/1459-9465
    • Accession Number:
      10.53228/njas.v28i4.452
    • Accession Number:
      edsdoj.111800f524543889f24d2f5392141bd