Changing Representations of African Women in Buchi Emecheta’s Second Class Citizen and Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and Anthills of the Savannah
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Date
2016Author
Çakmak Özgürel, Cansu
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The aim of this thesis is to analyse the changing representation of African women -
specifically Igbo women- in postcolonial Nigeria through an in depth reading of Buchi
Emecheta’s Second Class Citizen (1974) and Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart
(1958) and Anthills of the Savannah (1987), since these novels employ female
protagonists and significant female characters who represent new African women with
higher education in order to fulfil their ideals and ambitions and assert themselves as
individuals in terms of protagonists’ questioning and opposing the patriarchal structures
and limitations which restrict their lives socio-economically and socio-culturally.
In the first chapter of this thesis, Buchi Emecheta’s Second Class Citizen is analysed in
order to illustrate how Emecheta represents the newly emerging Nigerian women’s
identities and their status through Adah, the heroine of the novel. On account of her
education Adah is proven to be a representation of Nigerian women who struggle
against patriarchal restrictions in order to fulfil her dreams and ideals to assert
themselves as individuals owing to her determination and self-confidence.
In the second chapter, Chinua Achebe’s representations of African women in Things
Fall Apart and Anthills of the Savannah are discussed. In Things Fall Apart which takes
place in precolonial Nigeria, it is pointed out that although limited, the women
characters have some power according to the rules of the society they belong to. Invi
Anthills of the Savannah, which is Achebe’s last novel set in postcolonial Nigeria, the
heroine, Beatrice and other female characters are capable of existing as individuals in
the society and they do not necessarily have to have stereotypical roles as mothers and
wives in order to survive on their own. Moreover, they are leaders and decision makers
contributing to their society and country.
In the conclusion, it is concluded that the representation of African women has changed
as reflected in the heroine Adah, Beatrice and other female characters in these novels.
Even though African understanding of colonialism and patriarchy leaves a limited space
for these women, ironically they can benefit from the opportunities that colonialism has
brought to Nigeria: education; thus, it is pointed out that the conventional roles