Anglophone African Detective Fiction 1940-2020: The State, the Citizen, and the Sovereign Ideal

Author:   Professor Matthew J. Christensen
Publisher:   James Currey
ISBN:  

9781847013958


Pages:   244
Publication Date:   17 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Anglophone African Detective Fiction 1940-2020: The State, the Citizen, and the Sovereign Ideal


Overview

Providing a survey of Anglophone African detective fiction, from the late 1940s to the present day, this study traces its history both as a literary form and a mode of critical exploration of the fraught sovereignties of the African state and its citizens. Since the late 1940s, African writers including Cyprian Ekwensi, Arthur Maimane, Adaora Lily Ulasi, Hilary Ng'weno, Unity Dow, Parker Bilal, and Angela Makholwa have published over 200 murder mysteries, police procedurals, spy thrillers, and other fictional narratives of investigation and discovery in English-language newspapers, magazines, and novels. Distributed widely across the continent's diverse cultural and political geographies, these texts share aesthetic characteristics and thematic preoccupations that reflect transnational networks of production, circulation, and influence. Anglophone African Detective Fiction, 1940-2020 surveys this literary history and examines how African writers have repeatedly harnessed the detective story to interrogate postcolonial realities of selfhood and the state. It argues that African writers have turned the detective story into a highly productive, while at the same time suspense-filled and entertaining, mode of social and political critique, first of colonialism and the independence era and latterly of neoliberal governance. Offering an overview of paradigmatic texts, from Ghana to Kenya and Sudan to South Africa, the book traces the contours of the history of Anglophone African detective fiction that is at once a cultural history of a uniquely African assessment of the ongoing problematics of sovereignty and decolonization.

Full Product Details

Author:   Professor Matthew J. Christensen
Publisher:   James Currey
Imprint:   James Currey
ISBN:  

9781847013958


ISBN 10:   1847013953
Pages:   244
Publication Date:   17 March 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Adult education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction Part 1: Africanizing Detective Fiction's Un/Sovereign Subjects 1. Dispossession, Rescue, and the Sovereign Self in the Colonial-Era Detective Story 2. Sovereign States: Police Investigators, Secret Agents, and Sleuthing Citizens after Independence 3. Decolonization Arrested Part 2: Neoliberal Noir 4. Neoliberal Noir 5. Seriality, Stasis, and the Neoliberal State 6. Managed Risk and the Deadly Allure of Transparency Conclusion: Detective Fiction and the Future Imperfect An Anglophone African Detective Fiction Bibliography, 1940-2023 Bibliography Index

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Author Information

MATTHEW J. CHRISTENSEN is a former professor of the Department of Literatures and Cultural Studies, University of Texas. He is the author of Rebellious Histories: The Amistad Slave Revolt and the Cultures of Late Twentieth-Century Black Transnationalism (2012) and editor of Staging the Amistad: Three Sierra Leonean Plays (2019).

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