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Representations of Indian Ocean ecologies, heritage and kinship in Banaadiri fishing poems and Owuor’s The Dragonfly Sea

Representations of Indian Ocean ecologies, heritage and kinship in Banaadiri fishing poems and Owuor’s The Dragonfly Sea
Representations of Indian Ocean ecologies, heritage and kinship in Banaadiri fishing poems and Owuor’s The Dragonfly Sea
This article brings Yvonne Owuor’s 2019 novel The Dragonfly Sea into conversation with nine Banaadiri fishing poems called geeraarro, a form of classical Somali oral poetry in the maanso category. I explore the ways in which ideas of labour, kinship, and cultural heritage are presented in the fishing poems created over generations by an Indian Ocean coastal community as compared to a novel based on an Indian Ocean Island community, written by a Kenyan writer, and published by a major US publishing house. Working through oral narrative structures, the novel and the poems explore the relationship between littoral communities and Indian Ocean ecologies. I model how the comparative analysis of radically different forms of literature can illuminate the relationship between story, poetry and ecological sensibility. It breaks down the barriers between orality and literacy through the use of a range of analytical approaches including close reading, close listening, textual and performance analysis.


Indian Ocean ecologies; littoral communities; environment; heritage; labour; kinship; orality; poetry
2327-7416
132-149
Salaad, Ayan
c9f84d9b-fde7-4896-9be4-56a0c806b181
Salaad, Ayan
c9f84d9b-fde7-4896-9be4-56a0c806b181

Salaad, Ayan (2022) Representations of Indian Ocean ecologies, heritage and kinship in Banaadiri fishing poems and Owuor’s The Dragonfly Sea. Eastern African Literary and Cultural Studies, 9 (22), 132-149. (doi:10.1080/23277408.2022.2124901).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article brings Yvonne Owuor’s 2019 novel The Dragonfly Sea into conversation with nine Banaadiri fishing poems called geeraarro, a form of classical Somali oral poetry in the maanso category. I explore the ways in which ideas of labour, kinship, and cultural heritage are presented in the fishing poems created over generations by an Indian Ocean coastal community as compared to a novel based on an Indian Ocean Island community, written by a Kenyan writer, and published by a major US publishing house. Working through oral narrative structures, the novel and the poems explore the relationship between littoral communities and Indian Ocean ecologies. I model how the comparative analysis of radically different forms of literature can illuminate the relationship between story, poetry and ecological sensibility. It breaks down the barriers between orality and literacy through the use of a range of analytical approaches including close reading, close listening, textual and performance analysis.


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Accepted/In Press date: 12 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 November 2022
Keywords: Indian Ocean ecologies; littoral communities; environment; heritage; labour; kinship; orality; poetry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509456
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509456
ISSN: 2327-7416
PURE UUID: 5cf57a27-56a5-4e99-92c3-97a78cea1e83
ORCID for Ayan Salaad: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0009-6496-3520

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Date deposited: 23 Feb 2026 17:50
Last modified: 25 Feb 2026 03:12

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Author: Ayan Salaad ORCID iD

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