This dissertation explores how a combination of the epic and novel genres in primary texts is able to create a formal critique of empire. Through genres' ties to imperial ideologies and an examination of the function of orality in primary texts from Francophone West Africa and 1st and 2nd century Rome, I locate how texts subvert dominant imperial ideologies in order to create alternate interpretive communities that critique empire. In the Francophone African literary tradition, the novel is linked ideologically to colonization, while the epic became designated by the Negritude movement as a means to reach back to pre-colonial, chthonic African traditions. In the Roman context, epic was linked to empire while the novel emerged from the co...