The Dialectics of Betrayal in Lola Shoneyin's the Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Dialectics of Betrayal in Lola Shoneyin's the Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives Ebonyi Journal of Language and Literary Studies 1 (2) April 2018 Volume 1, No. 2: 70–76 (2018) ISSN 9091 4582 7142 THE DIALECTICS OF BETRAYAL IN LOLA SHONEYIN'S THE SECRET LIVES OF BABA SEGI'S WIVES Ezinwanyi E. ADAM & Alheri Winifred BULUS [email protected] Department of Languages and Literary Studies Department of Languages and Literary Studies Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo Nigeria Nigeria Abstract This paper appraises Lola Shoneyin's The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives with the intention of analyzing how issues of family betrayal and its impact on family members, individually and collectively, as well as the society are portrayed with the creative tool of meta-fiction. The study is qualitative and adopts the interpretative tool of sociological criticism to provide insights on how the author uses her plot, characters, actions and settings to represent the subject matter in the selected text. Findings reveal among others the appropriateness of the approach of social criticism to the selected novel that unveils the author's concept of family betrayal; the various forms of betrayal that exist in polygamy or polygamous homes. Through analyzed actions of Iya Segi, Iya Tope, and Iya Femi, and reactions of Baba Segi and Bolanle, the study reaffirms that betrayal takes place when an initial trust is broken and occurs in variant ways and modes in the context of polygamy. Likewise, any member of a family can be either its perpetrator or victim but its experience can build up or destroy the betrayed. Keywords: Betrayal, polygamy, literature, the Novel, and society Introduction Betrayal in families is an aspect of institutional betrayal. While institutional betrayal is the betrayal of two or more people bound by a social contract or covenant such as cult, marriage, business and many more, family betrayal is mainly experienced within a family setting. The family, according to Microsoft Encarta (2009), “is a basic social group united through bonds of kinship or marriage, present in all societies”. Ideally, the family provides its members with protection, companionship, security, and socialization. The structure of the family and the needs that the family fulfills vary from society to society. The nuclear family—two adults and their children—is the main unit in some societies. In others, it is a subordinate part of an extended family, which also consists of grandparents and other relatives. A third family unit is the single-parent family, in which children live with an unmarried, divorced, or widowed mother or father (Winifred Bulus, 2014). There are different types of betrayal in a family setting, which include betrayal of spouse, polygamy, betrayal of children by parents and vice versa, and betrayal of siblings. A family may experience more than a form of betrayal as exemplified by the Alao's family in Shoneyin's debut novel. Many of these forms of betrayal are represented in Shoneyin's novel and this paper is set to identify and discuss the forms and their impacts on victims, the family and the society, as portrayed in The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives. The novel, as a genre of literature, has become the principal tool often used by contemporary African writers to unveil cultural, political, religious and economical realities in the societies in which their works are written and/or received. Many literary critics and writers have argued that African literature, especially the novel, is a medium through which events and happenings in a society can be understood. Hence, African literature cannot be devoid of its enabling environment and realities. It is 70 Ebonyi Journal of Language and Literary Studies 1 (2) April 2018 within this context that social criticism becomes applicable to the study in order to understand the representation of betrayal in polygamous homes, which is a social construct, in the selected novel within its enabling social milieu. Theoretical Framework This study adopts the method of social criticism to represent social constructs by analyzing how society functions in literature and how literature works in society. Sociological criticism considers art as a manifestation of society. Ngugi wa Thiong'O in Writers in Politics (1997) sees literature as an offspring of conscious acts of men in the society. Literature divulges the tension and conflicts of a community. Sociology is the scientific study of human social relations or group life. Other disciplines within the social sciences—including economics, political science, anthropology, and psychology—is concerned with topics that fall within the scope of human society. Sociologists examine the ways in which social structures and institutions—such as class, family, community, and power—and social problems—such as crime and abuse—influence society (Ezinwanyi Adam, 2015; Winifred Bulus, 2014). However, Sociological criticism is literary criticism directed to understanding social interaction, or the responses of individuals to each other, and is perhaps the basic sociological concept, because such interaction is the elementary component of all relationships and groups that make up human society. This interaction or response is represented in works of literature. This critical approach directs the understanding of writers as a part of the society who makes meaningful contributions to that society by adding credit to their social vision. In addition, it is the representation of these social interactions and events of real lives in fiction that Mary Kolawole (1997) refers to as meta-fiction. According to Adams Hazard in Literature as Equipment For Living (1971:13) works of art including literatures are strategic naming of situations that allow the reader to better understand and gain control over societal happenings through the work of art. Pieces of art and literature are, therefore, systematic reflections of the society and societal behaviour. This analytical tool is used to evaluate events of betrayal and its impact on humans and society in Lola Shoneyin’s The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives. Review of Literature A search of existing literatures reveals a robust discourse on betrayal, its types and impact on lives, including victims in different settings but scant attention to how twenty-first century African female literary authors, like Lola Shoneyin, portray same subject with the use of meta-fiction. Some critics and literary scholars have also reviewed Shoneyin's debut novel, but from different perspectives and theoretical frameworks. For example, according to Ayodele Oyebanji (2011), the novel reveals the feminist views of the writer. In his review, Oyebanji discussed the events and actions of the characters from a feminist point of view. He further explained that the issue of emancipation arises in the novel as the feminine folk are seen as mere sex machines other than the able humans they are. Ununuma Edwin (2015) considered the issue of intra-gender conflict among the wives of Baba Segi and its influence on the Alao's family. In addition, Ezinwanyi Adam (2016) reaffirmed the negative effects of conflicts and violence among women, particularly co-wives and female siblings on homes and societies. Like Oyebanji, many critics have studied the selected novels from the theoretical or conceptual views of feminism, psychoanalysis and cultural constructions. The present study, as earlier explained, takes a different approach; it applies social criticism to unveil the portrayal of events of betrayal and its impact in Shoneyin's The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives. Betrayal in Family and its Impact in Shoneyin's The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives Lola Shoneyin's debut novel portrays a Yoruba society - the city of Ibadan and the subject of family betrayal, especially in polygamous homes. The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives mainly discusses 71 Ebonyi Journal of Language and Literary Studies 1 (2) April 2018 issues of secrecy and betrayal in a polygamous family setting. Baba Segi betrays his first wife, Iya Segi, by marrying a second wife, Iya Femi. Meanwhile, she had married Baba Segi when he was young and very poor; Iya Segi's money was used for the traditional marriage and Baba Segi used some of the money to start a business in Ibadan. When he informs her of his intention to marry another wife, she is more worried about her money and the fact that another woman is coming to eat the fruit of their labour. Meanwhile, Iya Segi has been having an affair with her husband’s driver, who consequently, becomes the biological father of her children. At some point in their marriage, she understood that her husband might not be able to get her pregnant and she does not want to be far from her money (Baba Segi), she is out to keep the man who has her money. Therefore, she comes up with the plan of sleeping with someone else for the singular purpose of procreation. This is because of Baba Segi’s infertility. She wants to remain with Baba Segi in order to have access to her money, which Baba Segi controls as the head of the Alao's family. Marriage in the Alao's home has little to do with love. For Baba Segi, it was rather a show of his wealth, power and 'manhood'. Ironically, his wives ridicule his manhood as the events in the novels unveil. Majority of the people who practice polygamy are the rich, influential and the powerful. Dominant groups in the society are mostly the ones who decide the culture of that society. Polygamy is a way of showing off ones accomplishment in the society. Baba Segi adopts this culture because he happens to be a rich man who loves younger women. Therefore, he considers his number of wives to be of great importance to his image and personality in the society. The second wife, Iya Segi has a different feeling towards Baba Segi’s decision to marry a third wife after her, since she had thought she was his last.
Recommended publications
  • Contemporary Nigerian Fiction and the Return to the Recent Past
    BEARING WITNESS TO AN ERA: CONTEMPORARY NIGERIAN FICTION AND THE RETURN TO THE RECENT PAST Juliet Tenshak Thesis submitted for the degree of PhD in English Studies School of Arts and Humanities, University of Stirling. December 2017. Acknowledgements The Ph.D journey has been long, very challenging but rewarding. On this journey, I got fresh and startling insights to the meaning of the word „Help‟. I made it to this point because of the help I have received from so many people in various ways, and at different times. I am humbled. My first expression of gratitude goes to my supervisor Professor David Murphy, whose support, PATIENCE, and encouragement is in large part the reason I made it this far. I would also like to thank my second supervisor Dr. Gemma Robinson who has been unfailingly supportive and encouraging. I am also grateful to the school administrator Alison Scott for the support I received from her in the course of my study. I owe a debt of gratitude to the British Federation of Women Graduates, who provided much-needed financial support for the final year of my Ph.D. To my husband Fidel Odhiambo Wayara, you are my exceedingly great reward. Thank you for loving and pushing. To my girls; Walsham, Naannaa and Kiyenret, thank you for putting up with my absence. Thank you for making motherhood a thing of joy and fulfillment for me, and thank you for the sacrifices you individually and collectively made for me to do this. I love you girls more than the whole world and back! To my mother Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Ipa-Lagos-Final-Report-2018.Pdf
    Introduction The inaugural International Publishers Association (IPA) Africa Seminar, entitled ‘Publishing for Sustainable Development – The Role of Publishers in Africa’ – was jointly organised by the IPA and the Nigerian Publishers Association (NPA), and held at the sumptuous Eko Hotel and Suites in Lagos, Nigeria on 9 May, 2018. Guest registration desk. Guests networking at the welcome reception. Like the Oscars… Some 180-odd delegates and guests knew they were at a special event as soon as they saw the entrance lobby to the conference room. This was decked-out, Oscars style, with ‘wrapped walls’ featuring the name of the event and the logos of the main organisers, the IPA and NPA. This made the perfect backdrop for pictures and was stylishly executed. It also added a touch of glamour, an effect accentuated by the presence of conference ‘stewardesses’ in sparkling dresses. Guests at the welcome reception. Speakers at the welcome reception, left to right : Elliot Agyare, Sellami Ahmed El Meki, Mohammad Radi. A professional room Badges and Seminar programmes were duly collected and delegates were able to mingle over refreshments before making their way into the spacious conference room where the stage and lighting were also very professional. The presence of a drumkit and African drums to the side of the stage was a hint of further excitements to come. Guest registration desk. Welcome Speeches Opening speech given by Gbadega Adedapo, The President of the Nigerian Publishers Association. The President of the Nigerian Publishers Association Gbadega Adedapo gave the first opening address in which he said that African publishing had a good story to tell, but that it hadn’t “shouted about it loudly enough”.
    [Show full text]
  • A Reading of Recent Anglophone Nigerian Poetry
    e-cadernos CES 12 | 2011 Outras Áfricas Poetry as Dialogue: A reading of recent Anglophone Nigerian poetry Sule Emmanuel Egya Edição electrónica URL: http://journals.openedition.org/eces/697 DOI: 10.4000/eces.697 ISSN: 1647-0737 Editora Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra Refêrencia eletrónica Sule Emmanuel Egya, « Poetry as Dialogue: A reading of recent Anglophone Nigerian poetry », e- cadernos CES [Online], 12 | 2011, colocado online no dia 01 junho 2011, consultado a 20 abril 2019. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/eces/697 ; DOI : 10.4000/eces.697 e-cadernos CES, 12, 2011: 75-92 POETRY AS DIALOGUE: A READING OF RECENT ANGLOPHONE NIGERIAN POETRY SULE EMMANUEL EGYA UNIVERSITY OF ABUJA Abstract: Recent Nigerian poetry in English seems to concern itself with the most pressing socio-political condition in Nigeria, especially the prolonged military despotism in the past decades whose consequences are still felt in the society. One of the strategies the poets use to dramatise and historicise the situation is the dialogic approach. Their poetry reveals a dialogue between the poet and the people, and between the poet and the despot. The poem that emerges from this act of dialoguing, it will be seen, is conditioned by how the poet perceives the personae with whom he dialogues, i.e. the dialogue between the poet and the people and the dialogue between the poet and the despot differ. The poem is also polyphonic, able to depict to a greater degree the social contradiction in an oppressed society. Using selected poems of younger Nigerian poets, I intend to show the process – and the possible effects – of this dialogisation in recent Nigerian poetry.
    [Show full text]
  • Building Democratic Institutions
    December 2018/January 2019 A publication of the U.S. Mission in Nigeria CROSSROADS BUILDING DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS The 2019 Elections CROSSROADS | December 2018/January 2019 1 Assistant Secretary of State Visit to Nigeria November 7-8, 2018 Assistant Secretary (AS) of State for African Affairs, Tibor Nagy delivers a lecture to AS Tibor Nagy receives a gift presented by the leadership of ECOWAS students and faculty of Baze University, Abuja following acourtesy visit to the ECOWAS headquarters in Abuja AS Tibor Nagy met with the leadership of the All Progressive Party - Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Ameachi and AS Tibor Nagy addresses members of the press Deputy National Chairman (south), Otunba Niyi Adebayo during a press roundtable at Baze University, Abuja Ambassador Symington and AS Tibor Nagy hosted AS Tibor Nagy met with the leadership of the People’s Democraic Party - leaders of American business to a dinner meeting Senate president, Bukola Saraki and party chairman, Prince Uche Secondus AMBASSADOR’S NOTES In this issue, we describe some of the that is the electoral process. No ways we’ve partnered with Nigerians individual ambition, no political party’s to achieve that goal. We have engaged aspirations, are worth more than the with the Nigerian government, key right of citizens to freely choose who election stakeholders, political leaders, will represent them. civil society representatives, and members of the voting public. Our There are many stakeholders in this only candidate is the process itself. election. The most important are the Our goal is your goal: a process that voters themselves. Every eligible voter, is transparent, credible, free, fair, and registered with INEC and in possession peaceful.
    [Show full text]
  • Nairobi Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Journal
    Nairobi Nairobi Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Journal African Masculinities: Discussing the men in Shoneyin’s The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives (2013) and Adebayo’s Stay with Me (2017) Review article Faith Ben-Daniels 1 & Nathaniel Glover-Meni 2 Published in Nairobi, Kenya by 1 Royallite Global in the, Nairobi Department of Languages Education, COLTEK, University of Education, Journal of Humanities and Ghana Social Sciences 2 Department of General and Liberal Studies, University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ghana Volume 4, Issue 4, 2020 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6564-9300 © 2020 The Author(s). This article Correspondence: [email protected] is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 Abstract license. This essay undertakes an often-overlooked aspect of gender anatomy Article Information of African literature, bringing to the fore the challenges faced by a th Submitted: 17 August 2020 segment of African men. Using masculinity theories, it exposes instances Accepted: 30th September 2020 Published: 22nd October 2020 of fake men who cling to hegemony as the pathway to achieve glory, while hiding their infirmities—impotency and sterility. The paper makes Additional information is available the case that the concept of African masculinity should be open up to at the end of the article debate in order to bring to the fore tensions associated with it. It articulates the position that mimicry should no longer be used as a power and glory mask to overlook tensions in many families often https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ leading to tragic consequences granted that African men were to be by/4.0/ innovative to adopt Western health standards.
    [Show full text]
  • Nigerian Writers
    Society of Young Nigerian Writers Chris Abani From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Chris Abani The poem "Ode to Joy" on a wall in the Dutch city of Leiden Christopher Abani (or Chris Abani) (born 27 December 1966) is a Nigerian author. He is part of a new generation of Nigerian writers working to convey to an English-speaking audience the experience of those born and raised in "sthat troubled African nation". Contents 1 Biography 2 Education and career 3 Published works 4 Honors and awards 5 References 6 External links Biography Chris Abani was born in Afikpo, Nigeria. His father was Igbo, while his mother was English- born.[1] He published his first novel, Masters of the Board (1985) at the age of sixteen. The plot was a political thriller and it was an allegory for a coup that was carried out in Nigeria just before it was written. He was imprisoned for 6 months on suspicion of an attempt to overthrow the government. He continued to write after his release from jail, but was imprisoned for one year after the publication of his novel, Sirocco. (1987). After he was released from jail this time, he composed several anti-government plays that were performed on the street near government offices for two years. He was imprisoned a third time and was placed on death row. Luckily, his friends had bribed government officials for his release in 1991, and immediately Abani moved to the United Kingdom, living there until 1999. He then moved to the United States, where he now lives.[2] Material parts of his biography as it relates to his alleged political activism, imprisonments and death sentence in Nigeria have been disputed as fiction by some Nigerian literary activists of the period in question.
    [Show full text]
  • SPECIAL ISSUE: AFRICA RISING Experts at the IPA’S Second Seminar on African Publishing Discuss Opportunities and Issues in the Book Business
    RIGHTS DEALS 1 Special Issue on African Publishing NAIROBI, KENYA JUNE 2019 SPECIAL ISSUE: AFRICA RISING Experts at the IPA’s second seminar on African publishing discuss opportunities and issues in the book business. View from Nairobi Puku Foundation Audio from Accra Words and Music Kenya Publishers Association South Africa’s bid to save Telling African stories ‘in Twins in Nigeria create president Lawrence Njagi on endangered languages with our own voices’ at Ghana’s Publiseer to help creators challenges ahead. Page 4 » children’s books. Page 8 » AkooBooks. Page 10 » monetize content. Page 18 » Subscribe FREE: Sign up to receive Publishing Perspectives’ daily email news at publishingperspectives.com/subscribeJUNE 2019 2 LETTER FROM THE EDITOR From the Editor: Listening for the Future n creating the agenda for the International from Lawrence Njagi about the challenges IPublishers Association’s (IPA) “Africa Ris- to be discussed, and from Gbadega Adedapo ing” seminar in Nairobi, IPA vice president about the Lagos Action Plan’s potential to Publishing Perspectives is the leading source of Bodour Al Qasimi and her colleagues at the address them. information about the global book publishing Kenya Publishers Association are guided We have even more coverage of this business. Since 2009, we have been publishing by a bold mission statement for the Africa seminar’s speakers and issues online at daily email editions with news and features Seminars series: to transform the future of Af- publishingperspectives.com, where we re- from across the book world. rican publishing. port on the world publishing industry five Our mission is to help build and contribute With its 81 member-associations of days a week.
    [Show full text]
  • Program the Haiti Illumination Project
    YARI YARI NTOASO CONTINUING THE DIALOGUE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LITERATURE BY WOMEN OF AFRICAN ANCESTRY ● ACCRA, GHANA ● 2013 ● ORGANIZATION OF WOMEN WRITERS OF AFRICA ● NEW YORK UNIVERSITY MBAASEM FOUNDATION THE WOMEN FOR AFRICA FOUNDATION 2 YARI YARI NTOASO CONTINUING THE DIALOGUE Thursday, 16 May through Sunday, 19 May 2013 Sponsored by The Organization of Women Writers of Africa, Inc. New York University Institute of African American Affairs Hosted by Mbaasem Foundation Lead Partner Fundación Mujeres por África/The Women for Africa Foundation Supported by New York University Africa House New York University Accra New York University Africana Studies Program The Haiti Illumination Project Planning support provided by: The New York Council for the Humanities a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities 3 CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS The Organization of Women Writers of Africa (OWWA) Founded in 1991 by African-American poet, performing artist, and activist Jayne Cortez and Ghanaian playwright and scholar Ama Ata Aidoo, the Organization of Women Writers of Africa, Inc. (OWWA) establishes connections between professional African women writers around the world. OWWA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit literary organization concerned with the development and advancement of the literature of women writers from Africa and its Diaspora. OWWA is also a non-governmental organization associated with the United Nations Department of Public Information (UNDPI). www.owwainc.org and www.indiegogo.com/owwa - also on Facebook and Twitter #YariYari OWWA Co-Founders: Ama Ata Aidoo & Jayne Cortez Executive Board: J.e.
    [Show full text]
  • Babatunde Ayeleru University of Ibadan, Nigeria Linguistic
    Babatunde Ayeleru University of Ibadan, Nigeria Linguistic innovation in the New West African Europhone novel: Between Interlanguage and Indigenization1 Abstract. Writers in West Africa have deployed innovative linguistic strategies to indigenize the language of the new West African novel. The novels of the Beninese writer, Adelaide Fassinou’s Modukpè: Le Reve brisé, Enfant d’autrui, fille de personne and Toute une vie ne suffirait pas pour en parler and the Nigerian author, Abimbola Adunni Adelakun’s Under the Brown Rusted Roofs are analyzed to demonstrate indigenous features that are applied in the European languages in which the novels are written. The paper posits that the language of the two writers is placed between their mother tongue, the Yoruba language, and the European languages (French and English) which they use to create their literary works. The paper concludes that African orature, translation, transliteration, metaphor, and metonymy constitute the strategies of linguistic innovation and indigenization employed by the writers. 1. Introduction From Obi Wali’s (1963) Makerere outburst, through Ngugi’s (1981) Marxist idealist position to Achebe’s (1965) moderate stance, African writers have been deploying different strategies to manipulate the European languages with which they create their texts. Language issue in African literatures has attracted an array of critical discourses by writers and critics such as Niyi Osundare (1983, 1984, 1995), Ahmadou Kourouma (1970, 1978), Gassama, Makhily (1995), Chantal Zabus (1991, 2007), Blachere, Jean-Claude (1993), Adewole Adejare (1992, 1998), Kayode Omole (1998), Bill Ashcroft (1998, 2001), Anatole Mbanga (1999), Herbert Igboanusi (2002), Femi Osofisan (2006), Ayo Kehinde (2009), and Jane Bryce (2010).
    [Show full text]
  • Nigerian Literature: Issues Then and Now
    The Wenshan Review of Literature and Culture.Vol 11.2.December 2018.121-141. DOI: 10.30395/WSR.201806_11(2).0006 Nigerian Literature: Issues Then and Now Abiodun Adeniji** ABSTRACT The sheer volume of texts, prose, poetry and drama, which constitutes Nigerian literature today is enough to intimidate and dissuade the faint-hearted from the historical necessity and critical responsibility of coming to grips with the major issues that have agitated the minds of Nigerian creative writers in the last five decades and more. Judging by the number of novels published since Tutuola’s The Palm-Wine Drinkard (1952) caught the eye of the reading public, it could be inferred that Nigerian Literature (in English) deals with a myriad of concerns too hydra-headed to fathom. This paper argues, however, that the multi-faceted concerns in Nigerian literature revolve around some major issues whose recurrence brings to the fore the “progressive-regressive” cycle of banalities that has so far defined the nation’s experience in statehood. It posits further that until this cycle is broken, deliberately by forces within, the journey of Nigeria from “a mere geographical expression” to a solid nation-state may be a mirage on the horizon. KEYWORDS: Nigeria, literature, issues, reminder, recorder, prophet The research embodied in this paper was made possible by a fellowship awarded to me in 2014 by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA), Republic of China, Taiwan. ** Received: May 6, 2016; Accepted: December 5, 2016 Abiodun Adeniji, Senior Lecturer, Department of English, University of Lagos, Nigeria ([email protected]/[email protected]).
    [Show full text]
  • The Portrayal in Lola Shoneyin's the Secret Lives
    MARRIAGE AND PROCREATION IN AFRICA: THE PORTRAYAL IN LOLA SHONEYIN’S THE SECRET LIVES OF BABA SEGI’S WIVES Chioma Emelone Abstract Marriage as a social institution should be a union of love and interdependence between spouses. This is not always the case in African, where many societies are largely patriarchal. Marriage is contracted for many reasons, some of which are beneficial only to the men; some female folk also see marriage as a way of escaping from certain unpleasant experiences. Marriage in Africa is mostly for procreation which is often more pronounced than the relationship between couples. Cases of crashed marriages owing to childlessness are always on the news and women often take the blame. This paper examines the issues of marriage and procreation in Africa using Lola Shoneyin’s The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives. Through the experiences of the female characters in the novel, the novelist criticizes the society where the female gender is subjugated, deprived, oppressed and abused. To examine this problem, this paper adopts the feminist approach to literary criticism, and it is discovered that marriages are contracted due to some patriarchal reasons as well as its perception by the female folk as a fortress from life’s ugly experiences. It is discovered that procreation is used in securing marital positions and that women often contribute to the unfortunate and painful experiences of fellow women. The paper recommends that marriage for African women should be a thing of choice; that the women should be aware of the fact that marriage does not guarantee social and psychological fulfilment; that marriage should emphasize love and commitment rather than procreation, and that women should PREORC JOURNAL OF GENDER AND SEXUALITY STUDIES, Volume 1 Maiden, Edition (2020) cooperate with one another to fight deprivations and marital disharmony.
    [Show full text]
  • Wole Soyinka
    Wole Soyinka 9781501375750_txt_rev.indd 1 15-06-2021 19:55:35 BLACK LITERARY AND CULTURAL EXPRESSIONS Bloomsbury’s Black Literary and Cultural Expressions series provides a much-needed space for exploring dimensions of Black creativity as its local expressions in literature, music, film, art, etc., interface with the global circulation of culture. From contemporary and historical perspectives, and through a multidisciplinary lens, works in this series critically analyze the provenance, genres, aesthetics, intersections, and modes of circulation of works of Black cultural expression and production. SERIES EDITORS Toyin Falola and Abimbola A. Adelakun, University of Texas at Austin, USA ADVISORY BOARD Nadia Anwar, University of Management and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan Adriaan van Klinken, University of Leeds, UK Alain Lawo-Sukam, Texas A&M University, USA Nathaniel S. Murrell, University of North Carolina, Wilmington, USA Mukoma wa Ngugi, Cornell University, USA Bode Omojola, Mount Holyoke and the Five College Consortium, USA Nduka Otiono, Carleton University, Canada Bola Sotunsa, Babcock University, Nigeria Nathan Suhr-Sytsma, Emory University, USA VOLUMES IN THE SERIES: Wole Soyinka: Literature, Activism, and African Transformation by Bola Dauda and Toyin Falola 9781501375750_txt_rev.indd 2 15-06-2021 19:55:35 Wole Soyinka Literature, Activism, and African Transformation Bola Dauda and Toyin Falola 9781501375750_txt_rev.indd 3 15-06-2021 19:55:35 BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC Bloomsbury Publishing Inc 1385 Broadway, New York, NY 10018, USA 50 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3DP, UK 29 Earlsfort Terrace, Dublin 2, Ireland BLOOMSBURY, BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC and the Diana logo are trademarks of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc First published in the United States of America 2022 Copyright © Bola Dauda and Toyin Falola, 2022 For legal purposes the Acknowledgments on p.
    [Show full text]