The confession of a criminal woman: An interrogation of Saga McOdongo's Deadly Money Maker
Abstract
Autobiographical writing in Kenya, specifically crime writing, is dominated by
male writers. Hence, Saga McOdongo's autobiography, Deadly Money Maker, is
unique because it is one of its kind, written by a Kenyan woman to foreground
the criminalisation of women in Africa. Other Kenyan texts tackling issues on
prison and imprisonment, appear to be relatively well-represented with both male
and female writers articulating their experiences in incarceration as a result of
first, colonialism, and later for political reasons. McOdongo's autobiography
deviates from the rest because it is the only one from a woman's perspective that
explores the subject of criminalisation. However, although studies on confession
normally deal with crime in relation to penitence and forgiveness, I argue that
Saga McOdongo's Deadly Money Maker adopts a disruptive confessional mode
because at the end of her autobiography, the aspect of redemption remains a
contestable one. This article examines the writer's confession: that is, how she
admits to getting involved in drug peddling, her experience of prison, assumed
contrition and the complexities of restoration. Also, I demonstrate that criminal
autobiographical writing is gendered and that a holistic study of prison literature
in Africa cannot overlook women's prison writing.
URI
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10130950.2015.1096133http://ir.mksu.ac.ke/handle/123456780/2065