Womanism and After: A Theatrical Justification for African Women’s Radical Response to Subjugation in Reloaded

Authors

  • Sola Emmanuel Owonibi Department of English Studies, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko, Nigeria.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18533/journal.v5i7.690

Keywords:

Nigerian society, nollywood movie, womanism, women subjugation.

Abstract

The inculcation and transmission of socio-cultural, ideological and moral expectations of every society are is as much the role of individuals and institutions of that society as the available oral or written records of the society. With the advent of modernity, the mass media have come to play crucial roles in the socialization and conditioning of members of the society to accepted or expected roles and behaviour. The theatre has come to be very relevant in this regard. Diverse thematic preoccupations have actually authenticated the social relevance of theatre and the home video, especially in the Nigerian Nollywood industry. The focus on inter-personal relationship is particularly remarkable. Some Nollywood movies are particularly exemplary in their deconstruction of the man/woman relationship in the African society. This paper studied ‘Reloaded’, a Nigerian Nollywood movie.  The choice of the movie, Reloaded for this paper is informed by it radical departure from the African feminist tradition of womanism which tends to reject a radical response by women to their subjugation, and rather favours a sort of mild – even passive - dialogic synergy with men. This advocacy for complementarity, as we can see in a movie like Reloaded, has not brought the much-desired solution to women subjugation. This revelation is much more in consonance with reality; the reality that response to issues is spontaneous and universally natural to individuals rather than being unifocal. Using the sociological approach and adopting a critical analysis method, this study finds out that reality in the Nigerian society has shown that, in many cases, passivity, docility and persuasion have failed to bring about desired results where corrective retaliation has done the magic. The man/woman relationship is not an exception, as it is revealed in Reloaded.

Author Biography

  • Sola Emmanuel Owonibi, Department of English Studies, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko, Nigeria.
    Dr. Sola Owonibi is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of English Studies, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko. His research interests include Literature and Medicine, Gender Studies and Comparative Literature.

References

Achufusi, I.G. 1994. Feminist inclinations of Flora Nwapa. Ed. Jones, E.D. Critical theory and African literature. London: James Currey.

Akangbe, C.A. 2008. Mythology in Yoruba drama: a study of Lere Paimo films. International Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship – motion picture in Nigeria. 3-5. 207-224.

Ayakoroma, B.F. 2008. Nigerian video films and the image question: a critical reading of Lancelot OduaImasuen’sHome in exile. Ibadan Journal of Theatre Arts. 2-4. 73-93.

Dangarembga, T. 2009. She no longer weeps. Ed. Perkins. K.A. African women playwrights. Chcago: University of Illinois Press. 100-139.

Dunton, C. 2002. Contemporary Nigerian theatre: the plays of Stella Oyedepo. Eds. Martin, B. et al. African theatre women. Oxford: James Currey. 99-108.

Ekwuazi, H. 2002. A new approach to the screenplay. Jos: National Film Institute.

Jeifo, Biodun. 2006. Being and becoming Anglophone, then and now. Ibadan: Journal of English Studies. Vol 3.

Kolawole, M.E.M. 1997. Womanism and African consciousness. New Jersey: African World Press.

Nwahunanya, C. 2007. Literary criticism, critical theory and postcolonial African literature. Owerri: Spring Field Publishers.

Ogunbiyi, Y. 1981. Drama and theatre in Nigeria: a critical source book. Lagos: Nigerian Magazine.

Ogunshina Bisi, “Gender ideology; Portrayal of Women in Yoruba Ijala.” African languages and cultures 1(1996): 83

Owonibi, S.E. 2012. “Tanure Ojaide’s God’s Medicine-men and Other Stories: A Feminist Perspective” History Research (vol.2.4)

Owonibi, S.E. 2014. “African Literature and the Re-construction of Womanhood: A Study of Selected

Plays of Femi Osofisan” Okechukwu Nwafor, MGBAKOIGBA: Journal of African Studies Department of Fine and Applied Arts, Nnamdi Azikwe University, Awka.

Downloads

Published

2016-07-28

Issue

Section

Article

Similar Articles

1-10 of 215

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.