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To browse Academia. Critique of aid , prescient of The Arab Spring. Hannah Boast. The River Jordan is currently in a highly degraded state due to pollution and the diversion of most of its waters by Israel. Jon Abbink. Postcolonial writers often illuminate myriad ways global markets in collusion with ruling elites coerce colonized communities to transform their impoverished lands for mass production and monetary gains.
Against this backdrop, this paper comparatively articulates the extent to which Mda Zake's The Heart of Redness and Helon Habila's Oil on Water as creative responses delineate conflicts over natural resources in the South African and Nigerian social space.
The selected works suggest that the South African and the Nigerian people and ecologies are exploited by their ruling elites in collusion with the corporate owners of technology for power, greed and economic interests leaving behind devastating tensions and contradictions which often led to the upsurge of violence and militarism through which extremist groups have become defiant in the destruction of lives, properties and hostage taking detrimental to national well-being.
The signification of the deliberate degradation of the South African and Nigerian landscape by the ruling class in collaboration with global capitalist conglomerate point to a trend in postcolonial situation to put power and authority at the service of the market and at the expense of public good. This study will utilize postcolonial ecocriticism as analytical tool to critique these unflinching social and environmental realities. However, the larger implications of these disquiets reveal persistent psychological trauma that often envelope the dispossessed people.