Abstract:
Many literary studies on gender acknowledge the significance of cultural myths in the
construction and performance of gender. However, the deployment of myth as a mode
of representing gender relations is complicated since on one hand it affirms the existing
gender relations while on the other it debunks them. The purpose of this study was to
explore gender-power discourses that highlight the interface between the problematic
representation of what is regarded as natural and mythological in fiction. It scrutinized
how Margaret Ogola and Marjorie Macgoye engage with myth as an ideological
category to (de)construct the problematic representation of gender relations. The
objectives of this study were: first to examine the nature and function of myths that
informs gender construction, secondly the authors’ deconstruction of gender myths and
finally to explore the authors’ vision in respect to mythic imagination of gender. The
study focused on Margaret Ogola’s The River and the Source, I Swear by Apollo, and
Place of Destiny; which were analysed alongside Marjorie Macgoye’s Coming to Birth,
Victoria, Murder in Majengo and Chira, in so far as they illustrate how the authors
fictionalize the problematic deployment of myth in the construction and performance
of gender. This study employed a qualitative research method from the constructivist
philosophical perspective particularly in analyzing the subjective nature of myth. This
entailed a critical analysis of the primary texts using the feminist post-structural
approach, to examine how the authors fictionalize gender-power relations within Luo
and other emerging cultures. The guiding theoretical standpoints in this analysis include
Judith Butler’s ‘gender performativity’, Roland Barthes’ ‘mythologies’ and Michel
Foucault’s ‘discourses of power’, all of which work together to display how language
and power relations rationalize gender differentiation. Findings indicate that due to the
fluidity of myth, there is a thin line between fact and fiction, thus myth has the power
to manipulate gender identities and roles. Myth as a language has the power to
‘naturalize’ gender roles and identities, making specific, archetypal traits definitive –
thus advantaging one gender over the other. Men and women were found to be potential
objects and vehicles of power interchangeably and indeterminately, women often
exercising power of their bodies in a subtle way to counter hegemonic power over them.
While location and culture influenced conceptualization of gender, myth was still found
to permeate socio-cultural, economic and religious aspects of life even in the
contemporary society. Education and Christianity were also found to be the major forms
of gender agency, contributing to the debunking of gender myths. The study concludes
that myth is a manipulative tool of power and control; thus any gender considerations
need to be realistic/ change with time so that one gender is not advantaged at the
expense of the other. The study recommends that there is need to shift from communal
conception of gender (fixed identity/ archetype constructed by myth) to a place where
humanity is placed at the core of existence