dc.description.abstract | Transnational feminism, as a significant paradigm of postcolonial feminism,
is sensitive to the differences in female experiences across the globe and emphasizes
the necessity to undertake distinct decolonial approaches for contesting Western
feminist attempts to generalize and obscure the distinct needs of women in
postcolonial countries. It seeks to identify, critique, and resist the intersectional
elements and patriarchal structures operating in the lives of women belonging to
distinct contexts. While asserting their solidarity with Adichie‘s proclamation that
―We should all be feminists,‖ the postcolonial feminist thinkers and academics
recognize the growing relevance of Women‘s Studies as one of the most pertinent
branches of feminism, capable of exploring multiple dimensions of female
experiences, and aiming to bring about radical changes in the society by effecting
gender equality. Women‘s Studies, as a significant branch of feminism, attempts to
explore various aspects of a culture that are oppressive to women, and relies on
interdisciplinary approaches to identify and strengthen the individual and collective
female potential, specific to different cultures.
This thesis attempts to investigate the role of select women writers belonging
to Igbo ethnic community in southeastern Nigeria in giving a more inclusive
representation of the experiences and concerns of Igbo women. The Nigerian writers
Flora Nwapa, Buchi Emecheta, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, explore the
multiple dimensions of female experiences in Igboland in their creative articulations
and present the need to reclaim the ethnocultural heritage and agency of Igbo
women to institute a socio-political transformation towards gender equality,simultaneously not negating completely certain constructive aspects of the colonial
impact. The changing nature of gender ideology in Igboland, the general Igbo
attitude towards women‘s reproductive ability and maternal care labour, and Igbo
women‘s substantial participation in the Nigeria-Biafra War of 1967, as represented
in select texts by these writers, when read in the light of the theoretical precepts put
forward by Chandra Talpade Mohanty and Molara Ogundipe-Leslie and those of
several other relevant African theorists and ethnographers offer a better insight into
the specific nature of Igbo women‘s experiences of both oppression and resistance.
Keywords: Igbo women, Adichie, Emecheta, Nwapa, African motherhood, Biafran
War. | en_US |