
New Books in Critical Theory Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" (Columbia UP, 2026)
Mar 30, 2026
Ainehi Edoro, Mellon-Morgridge Assistant Professor and founding editor of Brittle Paper, explores how African novels make forests into thinking, agentive worlds. She discusses forests as sites of worldbuilding, fragmentation as a creative method, rethinking literary history through indigenous forms, and speculative aquatic forests that imagine multispecies futures.
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Spaces Can Think And Drive Narrative
- Space in fiction can act as an active agent that drives plot and shapes character identities.
- Ainehi Edoro shows Achebe's evil forest attaches to certain characters and governs mortality and social order in Things Fall Apart.
Rewriting Literary History Through Forests
- Tracing African literary history through forests recenters indigenous forms rather than colonial origins.
- Edoro argues forest-focused genealogy reveals aesthetic and formal continuities from pre-modern narratives into modern African novels.
Fragmentation As Creative Force
- Fragmentation in African storytelling functions as creative recombination rather than mere breakdown.
- Edoro cites Yoruba myth (Ark divinity shattered into many deities) and Ben Okri's The Famished Road to show generative fragmentation.






