Ernest Cole’s Migration and Return in Modern African Literature: Black Bodies in White Spaces offers a timely and insightful intervention in African literary and diaspora studies by challenging dominant narratives that link migration to the West with inevitable success. At a time when anti-immigrant rhetoric is getting stronger, racialized border policies are becoming more common, and migrant protections are being weakened in Europe and North America, Cole focuses on African literary depictions of migration as sites of instability, racial violence, and mental breakdown. His main argument is both contestable and well-reasoned: for many African migrants, going back to their home country is not a failure of mobility, but a conscious choice that might provide them more power in reaction to the structural limits of Western racial capitalism. The study is structured around a tripartite migratory framework consisting of Flight, Arrival, and Return, enabling Cole to identify the emotional, political, and epistemic transformations associated with the migrant experience. This structure gives the analysis a clear direction and shows how the costs of migration unfolds across time and space. Cole does not conceptualize migration as a single event; instead, he sees it as a process shaped by historical discontentment, racialized exclusion, and contested belonging.
In the first part “Flight,” Cole talks about the reasons most Africans leave Africa, such as corrupt politics, a stagnant economy, disappointment after independence, and civil war. Drawing on novels such as We Need New Names, Open City, The Other Crucifix, and Behold the Dreamers, he demonstrates that the decision to migrate is already marked by violence and loss. Migration appears as admission into a global racial system that preconditions Black people for marginalization rather than as an unrestricted quest for opportunity. Cole’s readings put modern stories about migration in the context of longer histories of African discontent, while also rejecting romanticized stories of departure. The “Arrival” section constitutes one of the book’s strongest analytical contributions. Through close readings of Behold the Dreamers, Blue White Red, and Harare North, Cole exposes how undocumented status, exploitative labor, and racial surveillance converge to produce migrant precarity. These texts show that Western spaces are structurally hostile places where the law only offers limited protection and racism is unavoidable. Cole’s analysis emphasizes the psychological effects of this condition, highlighting how disappointment, mental collapse, and physical fatigue functions as a narrative consequence of the unfulfilled promise of the migrant dream. His analysis of Jende and Neni Jonga in Behold the Dreamers poignantly demonstrates how ambitions for upward mobility disintegrate amidst economic instability and law enforcement, exposing the American Dream as a racially exclusive construct.
Cole’s most innovative theoretical contribution is found in the final section, “Return,” where he redefines homecoming as a generative rather than a regressive phenomenon. By analyzing Ghana Must Go, Americanah, and So the Path Does Not Die, he formulates the notion of “constructive liminality” to characterize the deliberate occupation of an intermediary space by returnees who utilize both Indigenous and Western epistemologies. Earlier theories of hybridity focused on fragmentation or loss, but constructive liminality focuses on agency, productivity, and ethical engagement. In this context, return becomes a place of renewal where migrants can redefine their identity, sense of belonging, and contribution to their country. Characters like Dimusu-Celeste in So the Path Does Not Die show this new hybrid nature by showing how return can create new possible futures based on both transnational experience and local commitment.
Even though “constructive liminality” is clear and has a lot of potential, it also raises questions that make the reader think more deeply. By emphasizing agency, productivity, and ethical engagement, the concept may unconsciously minimize the different material and political circumstances that influence the prospects of return for numerous migrants, especially those lacking legal mobility, economic stability, or transnational capital. Constructive liminality seems to be accessible to people who have certain advantages, like dual citizenship or professional flexibility. This may make it less functional for people who are trying to reintegrate into society but are blocked by bureaucratic exclusion, fixed class hierarchies, or gendered expectations within postcolonial states. While Cole’s sustained engagement with literary texts allows for rich interpretive depth, the emphasis on fiction as the primary archive occasionally narrows the scope of the argument. A more prolonged engagement with ethnographic or empirical research on return migration could have enhanced his concept’s applicability beyond the literary sphere. Those restrictions do not take away the book’s valuable contribution; instead, they suggest useful areas for future interdisciplinary work that could further test and expand the analytical possibilities of constructive liminality across different social positions and national contexts.
Migration and Return in Modern African Literature forces readers to think about how we measure the success of migrants. Cole expertly balances literary analysis with historical context and theoretical engagement throughout the study. His conversations with scholars like Simon Gikandi, Obioma Nnaemeka, Sten Moslund, and Helen Cousins place the book in the middle of ongoing discussions about Afropolitanism, migration, and diaspora. Cole makes a strong case that return can be a strategic, creative, and forward-looking way to deal with racial exclusion instead of a story of failure. The study will be of particular interest to scholars of African literature, migration and diaspora studies, postcolonial theory, and Black studies. By insisting that the migrant story does not end with arrival in the West, Cole opens a critical space for reimagining African futures grounded in mobility, return, and ethical belonging.