Process of Nation Formation in Purple Hibiscus
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Department of English
Abstract
In her debut novelPurple Hibiscus,Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
strongly resists the values of the colonizers creating nationalistic narrative and the
linguistic space using the colonial Catholic religion as the site of discursive struggle.
Papa-Nnukwu, the so-called heathen father, disinherited by his Catholic son Eugene
just for following the Nigerian cultural values, has been idealized by the narrator
indicating his values far democratic than the Catholic values. Nigeria is on the state of
politicalturmoil, ruled by military Junta and people are living suffocating life and the
national and cultural values are invaded by the Catholic Church brandishing them as
heathen. Fifteen years old narrator grows to the state of maturity and nationalistic
awareness crossing the barriers of the rigid, imported Catholic values imposed by her
father. She surpasses her father’s hatred to her grandfather and the Nigerian values
amidst political tyranny in the country and patriarchal tyranny at home and grows to
love them by heart.