Table Of ContentTHE CHANGING FACE OF MORAL VISION IN THE 
AMHARIC NOVEL 
 
 
 
BY 
TENA SHALE 
 
 
 
 
 
A THESIS 
SUBMITTED TO 
THE SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES OF  
ADDIS ABABA UNIVERSITY 
 
 
 
 
 
 
FOR 
THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (PH.D) IN 
LITERATURE 
 
 
 
 
 
NOVEMBER, 2007
ADDIS ABABA UNIVERSITY 
SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES 
 
 
 
 
THE CHANGING FACE OF MORAL VISION IN THE 
AMHARIC NOVEL 
 
 
 
 
 
 
BY 
TENA SHALE 
 
 
 
 
 
APPROVED BY BOARD OF EXAMINERS 
 
 
_________________________        ________________________ 
       Advisor  
 
 
_________________________        ________________________ 
      Advisor  
 
 
_________________________        ________________________ 
     Examiner  
 
 
_________________________        _______________________ 
    Examiner
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 
 
I am grateful to the School of Graduate Studies of Addis Ababa University for 
the financial support they have granted me. 
 
I would like to extend my heartfelt gratitude to my advisor Dr. Abiy Daniel for 
his guidance and invaluable comments. 
 
I am indebted to Dr. Rejendra Prasad, who had also been my advisor prior to 
his leaving the university. 
 
My acknowledgements are due to my wife Aberash  Tibebu for her unfailing 
moral support and encouragements. 
 
Finally, my thanks are also due to my friend Ato Mengesha Gebreyes for his 
moral support and to putting his computer facility at my disposal.
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
Page 
CHAPTER ONE: Introduction---------------------------------------------- 1 
1.1. A Short Survey of Morality in Ethiopian Literature ----------- 2 
1.1.1. Morality in Geez Literature  ----------------------------- 2 
1.1.2. Morality in Early Amharic Literature  ----------------- 4 
1.2. Goals and Objectives of the Study  ------------------------------ 7 
1.3. Methods, Study Design and Works to be Investigated  ------- 8 
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 
CHAPTER TWO: Review of Related Literature  ------------------------- 15 
2.1. Ethics and Morality Defined -------------------------------------- 15 
2.1.1. The Will, the Good and the Evil  -------------------------- 16 
2.1.2. The End and Purpose of Human Life --------------------  18 
2.1.3. How Are Moral Judgments Made? ----------------------- 20 
2.1.4. Views on Morality and Ethical Theory ------------------- 21 
2.2. On the Link between Ethics and Aesthetics  ------------------- 23 
2.3. The Concept of Moral Vision -------------------------------------- 24 
2.3.1. The Concept from the Writer’s Perspective ------------- 24 
2.3.2. Experiencing the Narrative: The Concept of Moral  
         Vision from the Reader’s Perspective --------------------- 29 
PART ONE: Moral Vision against the Background of Authoritarianism 
and Moral Provincialism in the Novels of Haddis and  
Dagnachew ------------------------------------------------------------------ 35 
CHAPTER THREE: Authoritarianism and Quests for Self-Assertion  
and Justice in Haddis’s Novels ----------------------------- 37 
3.1. Panoramic View of Life in Haddis -------------------------------- 38 
3.2. Moral Vision in Haddis’s Novels ---------------------------------- 48 
3.2.1. Quest for Self-Assertion and Fulfillment in  
         Fiqir Eske Meqabir ------------------------------------------- 48 
3.2.2. Quest for Justice in Yelm Izyat --------------------------- 59
3.2.3. Triumph of the Good over the Evil in  
          Wonjelegnaw Dagna ---------------------------------------- 73 
Summary and Conclusion -------------------------------------------------- 79 
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 81 
 
CHAPTER FOUR: Moral Provincialism and Conflict between the 
                             Old and the New in Adefris -------------------------- 83 
4.1. The Moral Universe of Adefris  ------------------------------------ 85 
 
4.2. Moral Provincialism and Idealization of the Past in  
       Adefris ---------------------------------------------------------------- 88 
4.3. An Intruder of a Guest: A Symbolic Representation of  
       Adefris ---------------------------------------------------------------- 97 
Summary and Conclusion -------------------------------------------------- 105 
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 107 
PART TWO:  Utilitarianism and Moral Provincialism in Bealu’s and  
Tesfaye’s Novels -------------------------------------------------------- 108 
CHAPTER FIVE: Morality And Social-Class in Bealu’s Socialist  
                           Oriented Novels ----------------------------------------- 111 
5.1. Utilitarianism and Identification with the Common Folks 
        in Derasew  --------------------------------------------------------- 112 
5.1.1. The Artist's Life-Style, the Life of the People------------ 113 
5.1.2. Committed Art an Extension of Committed Life ------- 117 
5.2. Utilitarianism versus Egoism in Ye'qey Kokeb Tiri  ------------ 122     
Summary and Conclusion -------------------------------------------------- 130 
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 132 
CHAPTER SIX: Ethics and Ethnicity in Ye'burqa Zimita -------------- 133 
6.1. Ethnic Chauvinism as a Social System: Features and  
       Legacies -------------------------------------------------------------- 138 
6.2. Desire to Avenge: Retributive Justice as a Moral of  
       Vengeance and Its Implications ---------------------------------- 144
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 151 
PART THREE: Transcending Moral Provincialism in Fiqremarqos  
                       Desta’s and Sisay Nigusu’s Novels ----------------------------- 152 
CHAPTER SEVEN: The Moral Basis of Human Relations and Identity 
in Fiqremarqos’s Novels ---------------------------------- 154 
7.1. Inter-Racial Relationship: Accepting People for What  
       They Are -------------------------------------------------------------- 158  
7.2. The Ethical Basis of Identity and Search for One’s Root in 
        Fiqremarqos’s Novels ---------------------------------------------- 168 
NOTES ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 178 
CHAPTER EIGHT: Hedonism and Quest for Conscience in  
                             Reqiq Ashara------------------------------------------- 179 
8.1. The Socio-Ethical Milieu in Reqiq Ashara ----------------------- 180 
8.2. Egoism, Avarice and Aspiration in Reqiq Ashara -------------- 183 
8.3. Conscience as A Repository of Morality in Reqiq Ashara ----- 190 
 
CHAPTER NINE: Conclusion ---------------------------------------------- 200 
Bibliography ------------------------------------------------------------------ 207
ABSTRACT 
 
In this study were examined eleven Amharic novels by six authors for their moral 
vision. A combination of moral and sociological approaches of literary criticism was 
put to use for the study. The novels were selected on their representational merits as 
they belong to three historical periods: before 1974, 1974-1991 and after 1991. 
 
The specific purpose of the study being to explore and describe the changing face of 
moral vision in the novels selected, the study also made use of a combination of the 
structuralist  and  the  new-historical  or  cultural  critical  methods.  Discussed  in  six 
major chapters in three parts, the study reveals that there is a continuum of moral 
vision between and among the novels, on the one hand, and between the novels and 
the discourses of the periods that gave rise to the novels, on the other. Haddis’s and 
Dagnachew’s novels discussed in chapters 3 and 4 respectively reveal that the state 
of morality in feudal Ethiopia was characterized by moral provincialism with respect 
to the feudal lords, the then dominant class. 
 
Through  the  gestures  of  their  characters  striving  for  self-assertion  and  justice 
Haddis’s novels in particular strongly suggest the need for change of the scenario 
that subjected the people to plight-full life. But then, the change so envisioned, of 
necessity, had to come through social upheavals, and these are depicted in Bealu’s 
and Tesfaye’s novels. As discussed in chapters 5 and 6, respectively, the novels by 
these  two  authors  tend  to  circumscribe  morality  around  the  underdog  masses, 
though the depictions are constrained by elements of egoism and vengeance. In the 
last  two  major  chapters  (i.e.  7  and  8),  Fiqremarqos  Desta’s  and  Sisay  Nigusu’s 
novels are examined as showing a moral vision that transcends the notion of moral 
provincialism altogether. Fiqremarqos’s novels uphold the virtue of respect for others, 
both individuals and social groups, while Sisay’s novel challenges us to heed our 
conscience; for conscience is infallible.
CHAPTER ONE 
INTRODUCTION 
A close perusal of the Amharic novel, ever since its inception, reveals that its 
authors write with a strong sense of mission to promote social welfare. That is 
to say, the novelists characteristically feel obliged to envision a society free from 
social evils such as corruption, injustice, oppression, crime, subjugation and 
exploitation. So examining the novels for their moral vision merits a special 
consideration. 
 
Tentatively defined, “moral vision”1 in a work of art can be construed as the 
concept of what the artist wants to achieve in terms of morality: the ultimate 
achievement towards which he moves through his creative endeavor. Such an 
achievement is organically connected to what Grace (1972: 8) calls “the inner 
integrity” of the work in which the artist makes an honest effort to follow the 
truth of experience. Clearly, an achievement of this sort cannot be attained 
through an obvious moralization, for that would only make the work inartistic. 
It should, rather, be through moralization which is “fused with a mimesis of life 
constituting the work of art” (P. 190). 
 
In this study, a modest attempt is made to examine the moral vision of Amharic 
novels by six authors. The mimesis of life constituting the novels ranging over 
three socio-political systems, the study focuses on the changing face of moral 
vision in the texts selected. The dissertation has nine chapters with this one 
inclusive. An interdisciplinary study involving ethics and aesthetics as it is, 
there is a felt-need for a separate chapter on review of related literature and 
this  follows  from  this  introductory  chapter.  In  its  first  section,  the  present 
chapter sets out to give a brief account of the fact that morality has always 
been an integral part of Ethiopian literature. Also in this chapter are included 
accounts pertaining to the objectives, methods and design of the study, along 
with short descriptions of the Amharic novels selected for the study. 
  1
1.1. A Short Survey of Morality in Ethiopian Literature 
Ethiopia is one of the countries in the world that pride themselves on their 
heritage of antique civilization. Its written literatures, first in Geez and then in 
Amharic, are among the most prominent aspects of its heritage. 
 
1.1.1. Morality in Geez Literature  
According to Sumner (1972), Geez literature which is more of a secular nature 
ranged over twelve centuries and comprises five works in two categories. The 
first category falls under translations, and this consists of The Physiologue, The 
Book of Philosophers, and The Life and Maxims of Eskendes. The other category 
comprises  the  originals  which  include  The  Treatise  of  Zera  Yacob  and  The 
Treatise of Wolda Heywot. 
 
Sumner  is  apparently  taken  by  surprise  to  find  out  that  Ethiopia  is  in 
possession of such remarkable wealth of antique literature and philosophy. He 
talks  about  his  observation  of  the  profile  of  images  (of  man)  used  in  the 
sapiental and philosophical works of Ethiopia and describes his reaction in the 
following terms:  
 
I saw  a kind of architecture of images  building itself 
before  my  very  eyes,  a  real  pyramid  whose  basis  is 
nature  and  whose  apex  is  man  himself….  Man 
penetrates  the  pyramid  itself  like  a  line  joining  the 
summit to the center of the base (p. 427). 
 
The works mentioned above are in their chronological order and as such have 
evolved from wisdom to rationalism. Again in Sumner’s words: 
The  link  with  Christianity  evolves  from  the  entirely 
Christian  symbolism  of  The  Physiologue  to  the 
anthropocentrism, considered however in its theological 
orientation, of The Book of Philosophers, to the theistic 
pantheism of the first series of maxims in Skendes, and 
to the anti-Christ, although deeply mystical, radicalism of 
Zera Yacob and his disciple. (p. 436). 
 
  2
Of particular interest to this study is that the literature, among other things, is 
predominantly anthropocentric and the fact that it emphatically depicts man as 
a  moral  being.  Sumner  gives  us  a  vivid  picture  of  the  Semitic  man  in  the 
contrast he draws between the Semitic world and the Western world. Whereas 
the  Western  world  has  a  tendency  to  consider  things  as  they  are  in  their 
impersonal objectivity, the Ethiopian Semitic world is clearly anthropocentric. 
The Semitic Ethiopian is part of the world in which he lives. His starting point 
is within himself, his own personal experience. Instead of trying to express 
what is in his mind, he tries to evoke it. The western, on the other hand, takes 
as  his  starting  point  the  world  of  external  reality,  which  is  distinct  and 
measurable (pp. 427-428). 
 
Furthermore,  ethics  has  a  central  position  in  the  literature  in  which  man 
cannot  be  conceived  apart  from  his  moral  bent.  Morality  is  particularly  a 
central element of The Book of the Philosophers. The human heart is not simply 
a physiological organ but an image, a symbol and above all the center of a 
moral habit. In his study of the literature Sumner has identified various aspects 
(thought, man, rhythm, society, etc) all of which converge toward moral action 
as a single significant reality. 
 
With  reference  to  the  Treatises  of  Zera  Yacob  and  Wolda  Heywot,  Sumner 
asserts that nearly all the principles of ethics have been included ranging from 
the more abstract principles to their concrete application to life and there again 
from the relations of man to his Lord, to himself, to his family, his neighbor and 
State. Both Zera Yacob and Wolde Heywot agree on the prevalence of concern 
for moral question. And moral prevalence, writes Sumner, with reference to 
Physiologue  and  to  The  Life  and  Maxims  of  Eskendes,  characterizes  all 
expressions of Ethiopian thought.  
 
 
 
 
  3
Description:A Short Survey of Morality in Ethiopian Literature ----------- 2. 1.1.1 PART TWO: Utilitarianism and Moral Provincialism in Bealu's and . In this study were examined eleven Amharic novels by six authors for their moral .. Ivangadi is examined along with its English version Land of the Yellow Bull.