eggs benedicto, as it were
If one were to more closely examine the blithe yet not unpleasing discussion of the increasingly pivotal role of the Egg within the postcolonial hegemony offered by Friedman et al, the infrastructural convivialities of which cannot be divulged at present but which shed something resembling luminescence, if you will, on the formerly predominant historiographical discourse on the topic at hand, it would gradually become clear that a great need and desire have emerged that justify the taking of a highly critical look at these original texts, which in and of itself has led to the promising proposal by lesser authors than this, and indeed the writer of this piece concurs that they are indeed lesser, that what is needed is nothing less than and nothing more than a close reading and interpretation of the textual nuances that have yet to be uncovered and unpacked.
What is in order is nothing short of an Eggs-egesis.

