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<title>WAR AND GENDERED ROLE SHIFTS IN SELECTED UGANDAN NOVELS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1910</link>
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<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 05:56:56 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-20T05:56:56Z</dc:date>
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<title>WAR AND GENDERED ROLE SHIFTS IN SELECTED UGANDAN NOVELS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1911</link>
<description>WAR AND GENDERED ROLE SHIFTS IN SELECTED UGANDAN NOVELS
OLAYIWOLA, Mopelola Rachael
War, a motif in prose fiction, that depicts the varied angles of societal chaos, is explored in&#13;
Ugandan novels for different purposes. Existing literary studies on war in Uganda have largely&#13;
focused on the representations of disparities in gendered relationship and depiction of women’s&#13;
susceptibility to brutalities, with little attention paid to depictions of shifts in female characters’&#13;
adoption of polarised gendered roles. Therefore, this study was designed to examine the&#13;
representation of war and gendered role shifts in selected Ugandan novels, with a view to&#13;
determining the assigned roles, deconstruction of gendered roles, and the literary strategies&#13;
employed.&#13;
Michelle Foucault’s Model of Feminist Poststructuralism and Kate Millet’s Sexual Politics&#13;
Theory served as the framework. The interpretive design was used. Two Ugandan novelists&#13;
(Gerotti Kymuhendo and Moses Isegawa) were purposively selected because of their detailed&#13;
portrayal of war and its effects. Four novels (two from each author) were purposively selected&#13;
owing to their thematic relevance. The novels were Gerotti Kymuhendo’s Secret No More&#13;
(SNM) and waiting; and Moses Isegawa’s Abyssinian Chronicles (AC) and SnakePit (SP). The&#13;
texts were subjected to literary analysis.&#13;
The traditional gendered roles assigned to women are nurturance and caregiving, which&#13;
entrench their objectification, relegation and domestication. The deconstructive effects of war&#13;
mastermind reconstructing the battered images of women through the adoption of fluid,&#13;
transmuting, replicating and evolving gendered roles. War causes victimisation of and violence&#13;
against women (SNM, AC, SP and Waiting), rape, inter-tribal and political clashes, parental&#13;
rejection, imbalanced marital consent and family rivalry (SNM and AC); and displacement,&#13;
humiliation and disillusionment (Waiting and SP). These characterise the re-representations of&#13;
gendered relationships and roles and result in proliferation of unpredictability in the expressions&#13;
of assigned roles. War generates the dismantling of stereotypes (SNM, AC, SP and Waiting)&#13;
through the juxtaposed figuration of weak passive men versus strong assertive women. Female&#13;
characters build resistance to subordinating vices of encountered brutalities (SNM, AC, SP and&#13;
Waiting). Psychological shifts activated by continued traumatisation incite violence in the&#13;
victimised, which delineate their sense of power and dominance. Subjectivity to sexual&#13;
exploitation, displacement and dispossession are responsible for the acceptance of the role of&#13;
perpetrators by victims (SNM and SP). Marital denigration reinforces self-reclamation (AC and&#13;
Waiting) and assertion of autonomy through recourse to sexual abuse of victimisers (AC). The&#13;
expressed similarities in victimised characters’ adoption of vengeful retribution to oppression&#13;
during war (SNM, AC, SP and Waiting) attest to the similitude of power operation as capable of&#13;
deconstructing polarities in the depiction of gendered role. Exhibition of conservative ideology&#13;
about traditionally assigned roles breeds perpetual subjectivity of war victims (AC, SP and&#13;
Waiting). The narrative strategies employed in representing war and its implications for&#13;
gendered role shifts are multiple narrative voices (SNM, AC, SP and Waiting), journey motif&#13;
(Waiting and SNM), foreshadowing and flashback (SP and AC), vivid description and&#13;
dysphemism (SNM, AC, SP and Waiting).&#13;
Ugandan novels foreground the effect of war on the reconstruction of gendered role assignment&#13;
through the reactions of victimised female characters by means of graphic narrative strategies.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jul 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1911</guid>
<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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