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3 - So Vast the Prison: Agonistic Power Relations in Sardines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2018

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Summary

Closed systems have always appealed to writers. This is why so much writing deals with prisons, police forces, hospitals, schools. Is the nation a closed system? In this internationalized moment, can any system remain closed?

(Salman Rushdie – ‘Notes on Writing and the Nation’, 2002: 67)

This enclosed, segmented space, observed at every point, in which individuals are inserted in a fixed place, in which the slightest movements are supervised, in which all events are recorded … all this constitutes a compact model of the disciplinary mechanism … The plague as a form, at once real and imaginary, of disorder had as its medical and political correlative discipline … The plague-stricken town, traversed throughout with hierarchy, surveillance, observation, writing; the town immobilised by the functioning of an extensive power that bears in a distinct way over all individual bodies – this is the utopia of the perfectly governed city.

(Michel Foucault – Discipline and Punish, 1991: 197–198)

IN PENPOINTS, GUNPOINTS AND DREAMS, NGŨGĨ CONCLUDES HIS SURVEY of dissident African writers with a customary flourish: ‘prison then is a metaphor for the postcolonial space, for even in a country where there are no military regimes, the vast majority can be condemned to conditions of perpetual physical, social and psychic confinement’ (Ngũgĩ 1998: 60). This is the dominant motif of a chapter entitled ‘Enactments of Power’, in which Ngũgĩ draws heavily from Discipline and Punish. His attempt to forge epistemological connections between modes of power in feudal Europe and those of post/neo-colonial Africa supplements the philosophical inquiries of V.Y. Mudimbe, amongst many others. This chapter builds on the foundations established in the analysis of Sweet and Sour Milk, arguing that the central Variations novel signals an intensification of Farah's primary concern with the complex interplay between the microphysics of power and resistance. From the Foucauldian perspective of this study, however, Sardines stands alone for several reasons. Critical debates have raged over the complex and at times contradictory figure of Medina, the only female member of the ‘Group of 10’, as well as her wider role within Farah's fictional oeuvre. For Wright, the ‘problem remains …

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The Disorder of Things
A Foucauldian Approach to the Work of Nuruddin Farah
, pp. 63 - 94
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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