TY - JOUR
T1 - AFRICAN WOMEN WRITERS ACROSS GENERATIONS
T2 - NAVIGATING LOCAL CONTEXTS AND EVOLVING FEMINIST APPROACHES
AU - Lomotey, Benedicta Adokarley
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Author(s).
PY - 2024/12/1
Y1 - 2024/12/1
N2 - Scholars in African feminism have historically repudiated the concept of feminism, which has been perceived as a Western imposition. Through a literary analysis of Ekomo (Nsué Angüe, 1985), Efuru (Nwapa, 1966) and Une si longue lettre (Bâ, 1979), the current article examines how first-generation African women writers approach the conditions that oppress women. Furthermore, the article discusses how the approach to women’s challenges in first-generation novels differs from the forms of feminism that are being articulated more recently by African feminist activists. The findings show that Nsué Angüe, Nwapa, and Bâ’s novels project the experiences and concerns of their female characters through the various ways of liberating women in the local context such as nego-feminism and snail-sense feminism. These African variants of feminism cater to their local peculiarities in ways that reflect the differences between African and Western cultures. However, these earlier approaches to women’s challenges do not align with the forms of feminism articulated today.
AB - Scholars in African feminism have historically repudiated the concept of feminism, which has been perceived as a Western imposition. Through a literary analysis of Ekomo (Nsué Angüe, 1985), Efuru (Nwapa, 1966) and Une si longue lettre (Bâ, 1979), the current article examines how first-generation African women writers approach the conditions that oppress women. Furthermore, the article discusses how the approach to women’s challenges in first-generation novels differs from the forms of feminism that are being articulated more recently by African feminist activists. The findings show that Nsué Angüe, Nwapa, and Bâ’s novels project the experiences and concerns of their female characters through the various ways of liberating women in the local context such as nego-feminism and snail-sense feminism. These African variants of feminism cater to their local peculiarities in ways that reflect the differences between African and Western cultures. However, these earlier approaches to women’s challenges do not align with the forms of feminism articulated today.
KW - African (Hispanophone) feminist literature
KW - Efuru
KW - Ekomo
KW - gender
KW - Une Si Longue Lettre
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85219738811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2478/genst-2024-0007
DO - 10.2478/genst-2024-0007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85219738811
SN - 1583-980X
VL - 23
SP - 93
EP - 119
JO - Gender Studies
JF - Gender Studies
IS - 1
ER -