Introduction and Critical Overview Author: Joe Barnabas Genre: Literary Fiction, Family Sagas, Marriage Relationships Amazon page: View on Amazon The second edition of Clan of Mésalliance rewards attention as more than a reissued novel: it is a text that speaks with fresh force to contemporary debates about identity, kinship, religion, and migration. At its core, the novel examines what happens when intimate relationships are shaped, and often strained by inherited systems of belief, cultural expectation, and social division. This review argues that Barnabas’s novel is most compelling when read as a transnational family narrative in which private life becomes the testing ground for broader questions of interreligious encounter and multicultural coexistence. Its strongest achievement lies in showing that love, family, and belonging are never purely personal matters, but are always entangled with theology, history, geography, and power. Read in this way, the second edition confir...
To understand the architecture of poverty in Nigeria, one must look past the macroeconomic charts, the fluctuating value of the Naira, and the dense policy papers drafted in the air-conditioned chambers of Abuja. Instead, one must look at the line. Poverty in Nigeria is not merely a statistical deficit; it is an active, kinetic performance. It is an odyssey measured in metres, hours, and the friction of human bodies waiting for basic dignity. In this landscape of systemic abandonment, two phenomena have emerged to define the lives of the urban and rural poor: the forced solidarity of Queued-mmunity and the tragic romanticization of its Queue-tiful victims. In standard public health parlance, herd immunity implies a collective shield: a point at which a population becomes safe from a rampaging virus. In the socio-political ecosystem of Nigeria’s margins, this has mutated into queued-mmunity . This is the unique, state-engineered inoculation of the masses against expectation. By trapp...