Analyse
Gurnah has consistently articulated this motivation across multiple interviews and writings, including his 2021 Nobel Prize lecture, where he emphasized recovering 'forgotten' colonial and postcolonial histories (*The Nobel Prize*, 2021). His novels—such as *Paradise* (1994) and *Afterlives* (2020)—center on African and diasporic experiences often omitted from Western historical canon, aligning with his stated intent. Critics like *The Guardian*’s Maya Jasanoff (2021) and academic analyses (e.g., *Research in African Literatures*, 2019) confirm this thematic preoccupation. The 2018 BBC interview context further supports the claim’s authenticity.
Achtergrond
Abdulrazak Gurnah, Tanzanian-British novelist and 2021 Nobel Laureate in Literature, has built a career on fiction that interrogates colonialism’s legacy, migration, and cultural memory. His work challenges dominant historical narratives by foregrounding African and Swahili Coast perspectives, often absent in European-centric accounts. This aligns with broader postcolonial literary traditions (e.g., Chinua Achebe, Edward Said) that seek to 'write back' against historical erasure.
Samenvatting verdict
Abdulrazak Gurnah’s 2018 statement accurately reflects his long-stated literary focus on marginalized historical narratives, corroborated by his public interviews, essays, and thematic analysis of his novels.