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The Prison of Nigerian Woman: Female Complicity in Sefi Atta's Everything Good Will Come

from ARTICLES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2013

Florence Orabueze
Affiliation:
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
Ernest N. Emenyonu
Affiliation:
University of Michigan-Flint
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Summary

Speak me to all barren women, she admonished as I strained my ears to hear her faint and dwindling voice. Speak me to all mothers who have only one child in a land and among a people where the value of a woman depends upon her capacity to fill her husband's house with children. Speak me to all women who have a daughter as an only child …. Speak me to all women who forfeited the love and respect of their husbands because they could not fill the dreams of multiple sons to inherit the men when they have joined the ancestors … Speak me to all women who after one daughter, laboured in vain to reverse the misfortune of a womb, dried up in the early hours of creation.

(Emenyonu, 1991: 1)

The above quotation points to the fact that the status of womanhood in Africa and in Nigeria, in particular, has been discussed in a number of ways to emphasize the discrimination, gender inequalities, injustice, degradation, humiliation and dehumanization that women reel under. This dying lamentation from Emenyonu's Tales of our Motherhood underscores the female situation in Nigeria. This paper takes the analogy a step further as the status of womanhood in the country is looked at from the context of a prison. Sefi Atta's Everything Good Will Come is used for critical illustration.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2009

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