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Forests in fiction are often understood simply as settings, symbols, or remnants of a premodern past. Yet many African novelists have turned to the forest to experiment with worldbuilding and to imagine new futures. This...
Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" ( Columbia UP, 2026) is an episode from New Books in African Studies by New Books Network. Forests in fiction are often understood simply as settings, symbols, or remnants of a pr...
This episode belongs to New Books in African Studies.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Mar 29, 2026, 62:02 long, audio available.
Forests in fiction are often understood simply as settings, symbols, or remnants of a premodern past. Yet many African novelists have turned to the forest to experiment with worldbuilding and to imagine new futures. This groundbreaking book explores the life of the forest in African fiction, showing how writers have used it to reinvent the novel’s formal, aesthetic, and political possibilities. Ainehi Edoro argues in Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think ( Columbia UP, 2026) that forests in African fiction are laboratories for unmaking and remaking the world, where writers break apart familiar forms to test alternate forms of life, knowledge, and power. Instead of treating the forest as a backdrop, these writers imagine it as a living structure: a space where politics, history, myth, violence, technology, the magical, and creativity animate fictional worlds. Spanning indigenous African narratives and contemporary science fiction, Forest Imaginaries traces the lineage of forest worlds in African literature: Chinua Achebe’s evil forest, the cosmic forest in Wọle Ṣóyínká’s mythic imagination, Thomas Mofolo’s forest of imperial dreams, Amos Tutuola’s endless fractal forest, and Nnedi Okorafor’s aquatic forest of new ecological futures. This book rethinks African literary history by showing how African writers draw on the forest—and the wealth of Indigenous ideas about time, space, and storytelling it conjures—to transform the novel’s aesthetic, political, and philosophical horizons. Ainehi Edoro is a Mellon-Morgridge Assistant Professor of English and African cultural studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She is the founding editor of Brittle Paper, a leading platform for African literary culture. Morteza Hajizadeh is a Ph.D. graduate in English from the University of Auckland in New Zealand. His research interests are Cultural Studies; Critical Theory; Environmental History; Medieval (Intellectual) History; Gothic Studies; 18th and 19th Century British Literature. YouTube Channel: here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member!
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Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" ( Columbia UP, 2026) is an episode from New Books in African Studies by New Books Network.
This episode is 62:02 long.
This episode was published on Mar 29, 2026.
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You can listen to Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" ( Columbia UP, 2026) on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" ( Columbia UP, 2026) is from New Books in African Studies by New Books Network.
Published Mar 29, 2026 and 62:02 long