Manipulation of subject peoples' history, legends and myths: The case of Prestor John.
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Date
2008
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
NUST, Department of Communication.
Abstract
This article claims that John Buchan’s Prester John, a small novel of 1910 can be
read, arguably, as a settler novel setting out to undercut the indigenous Africans’
wars of resistance and self-determination by manipulation of myths, legends and
history. The claim is also that this novel by the private secretary to the British High
Commissioner to South Africa belittles the Africans’ claim to connections with their
legendary ancestral heroes. There is a contrived, systematic denigration of “the
black other” at the frontier so that he appears as if he has no meaningful claim to
a history of organisation to fall back on. As savages, Africans are rendered blind,
leaderless and motiveless. All that is done to benefit the Empire. Some extensive
supporting examples will be drawn from Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines.
However, in the process of denigrating the Africans, John Buchan is caught up in
some contradictions. All this demonstrates that the colonial process itself was/is
complex even to its perpetrators, as shall be shown here.
Description
Keywords
Book review, Buchan, John, 1875-1940, Characters, Prestor John (Fictitious character), Myths - South Africa - Fiction, Legends - South Africa - Fiction
Citation
Kangira, J., & Chirere, M. (2008). Manipulation of subject peoples' history, legends and myths: The case of Prestor John. Nawa Journal of Communication, 2(2), 199-206.