Shopping cart

Your cart is currently empty

Product image slideshow Items

  • CARA Serubiri Moses: Judith Namala—A Novella

Serubiri Moses: Judith Namala—A Novella

$18.00
Excl. tax

Pre-order
Shipping April 2026

Paperback, 88 pages, 6.8 x 4.3 inches, 4 b&w ill.
ISBN: 9781954939097

Judith Namala: A Novella, Serubiri Moses’s fiction debut, is an experiment in adaptation, storytelling, and translation as fictocriticism. Set in Uganda between the late 1970s and early 2000s, the book follows the domestic dramas of Judith Namala, a Black maid, and Esther Nambi, her Black madam.

Unfolding across short vignettes, Moses’s innovative prose attends to the silences and opacities that mark the distances—and forced proximities—between two characters whose tense relationship is defined by class and social hierarchy. Hovering at the surface of these quiet scenes of servitude, the narrator offers an enigmatic model of interiority—grasped only in passing, where psychic geographies confront and sometimes, surprisingly, mirror one another.

Drawing on cultural artifacts, art, film, and his own translation of lyrics from a Luganda popular music songbook, Moses spins a story of housework and labor that reaches across forty years of Ugandan history. Written in a unique style informed by oral tradition, folklore, criticism, and reportage, Judith Namala: A Novella is an intimate, domestic portrait that embraces the poetics of metaphor.

Judith Namala is a cinematic dressing-down of airs and manners: a collision of tradition, ritual, and other social parameters revealed through imperatives or hauntings. In a series of lyric portraits riffing off echoes of Annie John and Sula, poet-writer-curator Serubiri Moses exercises his multitalented explorations of text and artifacts, each image operating almost like a fetish. Here, the elite and extracted, the rural and cosmopolitan, are juxtaposed in suffocations of domesticity.
—Ladan Osman

Through its innovative structure combining rich storytelling, history, and the writer’s own commentary, Judith Namala tells the story of a household in Uganda in which a young woman from the rural areas is employed as a maid. The story reveals the depth of injustice at the household level, where one woman’s child is abandoned, whilst the children of an elite Kampala household are over-mothered.
—Sitawa Namwalie

Serubiri Moses is a Ugandan curator and writer living in New York City. He is the author of two poetry books, THE MOON IS READING US A BOOK and You Who Suffer Because You Love, Love Still More (pântano books, 2023 and 2025). His fiction has appeared in Lolwe and Ursula. Moses is a contributing editor at e-flux journal, and teaches at Hunter College and the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College. This is his first novel.

Judith Namala: A Novella is the first title in CARA’s publication series, Practice. Each season features newly commissioned texts, writing in translation, expansive conversations, and rigorous and experimental approaches to research and inquiry that model new ways of thinking and making beyond disciplinary frameworks and genres. The series supports practices that challenge dominant narratives, expand historical records, and foreground process, care, and embodied forms of knowing. In its inaugural year Practice invites writers to engage with histories of material and visual culture to animate their potential for addressing the urgencies and cultural shifts of the present.

COLOPHON

Practice, vol. 1
Editor: Rachel Valinsky
Copy Editor: Re’al Christian
Designer: Stoodio Santiago da Silva, Bárbara Acevedo Strange, and Moritz Appich
Printer: KOPA, Lithuania
Edition of 2,000