Cover image for Decolonizing Christianities in Contemporary Nigerian Literature By Adriaan van Klinken

Decolonizing Christianities in Contemporary Nigerian Literature

Adriaan van Klinken

Coming in November

$79.99 | Hardcover Edition
ISBN: 978-0-271-10039-5
Coming in November

$34.99 | Paperback Edition
ISBN: 978-0-271-10040-1
Coming in November

DOI: 10.5325/b.20259638

240 pages
6" × 9"
2025

World Christianity

Decolonizing Christianities in Contemporary Nigerian Literature

Adriaan van Klinken

“Adriaan van Klinken’s book breaks new critical ground. He brings a keen, probing intellect to the task of dissecting the provocative and fascinating ways in which Nigerian literature is shaped by, and reshapes, traditions of Christianity. Van Klinken’s is a consistently absorbing and indispensable critical account.”

 

  • Description
  • Reviews
  • Bio
  • Subjects
In African literature, Christianity has long been represented as a foreign religion, associated with the history and ongoing legacies of European colonialism and mission. But in recent decades, writers have begun to engage with it in more complex, ambivalent, and at times liberatory ways that are reflective of the religion’s tremendous growth and diverse transformations across the continent.

Adriaan van Klinken addresses this literary shift in the context of Nigeria, a major center of literary production and Christian growth on the continent. Through close dialogue with works by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Okey Ndibe, Chinelo Okparanta, and others, van Klinken probes the lived and imagined experiences of Catholicism, Evangelicalism, and Pentecostalism across Nigeria in the wake of decolonization. Taking Nigerian literary writers seriously as social and religious thinkers, van Klinken puts their novels into conversation with the works of major African theologians, philosophers, and social theorists. By foregrounding the creative theologizing that fiction writing participates in, this book demonstrates how these literary texts—beyond merely representing and critiquing sociopolitical realities—also take part in envisioning the alternative worldmaking potential of Christian traditions in the Nigerian context.

“Adriaan van Klinken’s book breaks new critical ground. He brings a keen, probing intellect to the task of dissecting the provocative and fascinating ways in which Nigerian literature is shaped by, and reshapes, traditions of Christianity. Van Klinken’s is a consistently absorbing and indispensable critical account.”
“This is a textured intellectual contribution to our understanding of Christianity through a decolonial framework. By drawing on works by eminent Nigerian literary writers, it presents a rich compendium of the lived and imagined experiences of Christian adherents during the decolonization era. The book is a serious attempt that foregrounds literary and religious scholarship, offering a new understanding of Christian traditions in the larger context of Nigeria’s religious body politic. There is no better time to have such a book than now.”
“This is a superb book. It enfleshes Christianity in Nigeria by ‘inter-reading’ contemporary novels with the work of theologians and critical theorists from the African continent. Van Klinken reveals how public intellectuals provide a thoughtful and nuanced engagement with the prominence of Christianity in their country. In engaging prose, he offers students of religion and literature a fresh way of studying their subjects.”
“In this brilliant book, literature functions as a source for theological reflection, fodder for social ethical debates, and transcripts of theopoetics. With careful reasoning, multidisciplinary methodology, and ethical sensitivity, Adriaan van Klinken brings Nigerian twenty-first-century literature into the theological academy. Any scholar serious about discerning or grasping the full breadth of Nigerian theology or social ethics must read this book.”
“Adriaan van Klinken delivers a brilliant contribution to African Christianity and its interrelated disciplines of literature, social ethics, and history. The path he charts here is one that future scholars will be following for a while.”
“A bold, ambitious, and original exploration of Christianity and African literary texts. It meticulously puts religion in its proper place in African literary history.”

Adriaan van Klinken is Professor of Religion and African Studies at the University of Leeds. He is the author of Kenyan, Christian, Queer: Religion, LGBT Activism, and Arts of Resistance in Africa and Transforming Masculinities in African Christianity: Gender Controversies in Times of AIDS, the former also published by Penn State University Press.

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