Adichie’s Thematic Construction of a Post-Colonial Nigerian Nation-State in Two Excerpts from Her Purple Hibiscus: An Experiential Meaning Scrutiny
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Abstract
Abstract: This article digs into Adichie’s world view of the post-colonial Nigeria via her use of the English language
in two extracts culled from her Purple Hibiscus. To go into details, the study examines how Adichie
makes use of particular types of transitivity patterns to weave into her text her thematic construction of
Nigeria after independence. To this end, the Experiential Meaning has been used as a theoretical lens
given that the exploration of the transitivity properties in/of a text can provide a full insight into how the
writer encodes his/her experience of the world therein as advocated by Systemic Functional Linguistics
scholars like Halliday (1971/1976), and his followers Hassan (1985/1989), Eggins (2004), and
Matthiessen (2004/2006). As a matter of fact, the study offers a linguistic analysis of the selected
extracts, a summary of the findings, and the ensuing interpretation. Actually, the interpretation of the
findings has revealed that Adichie has encoded tremendous meanings through her outstanding use of
such process types as material, mental and verbal processes. The distribution of these key processes in
the analyzed extracts per participant has also highlighted both some of the author's key characters and
to what extent these latter ones embody her perceptions of the social, religious and political issues that
she artistically tries to castigate in her novel under examination. The study ultimately opens up to further
explorations embracing such other fields of the Systemic Functional Linguistics as the interpersonal and textual meanings.
