Imperialism In 'My Parent's Bedroom'

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Writing a story about a genocide that you did not live through is an extremely difficult story to tell. Uwem Akpan went into the mind of a nine-year old girl during the Rwanda genocide, in his short story called My Parent’s Bedroom. This story exemplifies his deservingness to be selected for the anthology of short stories from around the world. Akpan tells the story from the perspective of a nine-year old girl named Monique whose parents are both from different cultural groups, the Hutu and Tutsi. These two groups of people are killing each other because the Belgians had taken over Rwanda during a time of imperialism and had favored the minority Tutsis over the Hutus. Throughout the story, Monique’s innocence is revealed when tough choices had to be made by her parents to keep the family safe. As the story reaches the end, Monique's ignorance is flushed away as she discovered that nobody is safe from death. When considering a piece of literature for an anthology, Uwem Akpan's My Parent's Bedroom has to be seriously …show more content…

In the short story My Parent’s Bedroom, death is the main token throughout this tragedy. Monique’s family cannot avoid these morbid events as it surrounds them, and starts slowly suffocating them. When the Tutsi blood drips from the ceiling of the attic that is holding several Tutsi families from the Hutu, that represents a lid that is enclosing Monique’s house in which they are unable to escape from death. Akpan is able to successfully write a story about death through the eyes of a nine-year old girl. Killing someone with a machete is personal, rather than with a gun where you can be far away. Monique’s father could feel the life escape out of his wife as the machete cracked her skull. Her death symbolizes not only the Rwanda genocide but also displays how unity in a family especially of different cultures is extremely

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