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Re-imagining Ogun in selected Nigerian plays: a decolonial reading

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dc.contributor.advisor Murray, Jessica (Professor of English)
dc.contributor.advisor Nkealah, Naomi
dc.contributor.author Oluwasuji, Olutoba Gboyega
dc.date.accessioned 2019-06-06T06:31:28Z
dc.date.available 2019-06-06T06:31:28Z
dc.date.issued 2018-06
dc.identifier.citation Oluwasuji, Olutoba Gboyega (2018) Re-imagining Ogun in selected Nigerian plays: a decolonial reading, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/25490>
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/25490
dc.description Text in English en
dc.description.abstract Through an in-depth analysis of selected texts, this study engages with the ways in which Ogun is reimagined by recent selected Nigerian playwrights. Early writers from this country, influenced by their modernist education, misrepresented Ogun by presenting only his so-called negative attributes. Contemporary writers are reconceptualising him; it is the task of this thesis to demonstrate how they are doing so from a decolonial perspective. These alleged attributes represent Ogun as a wicked, bloodthirsty, arrogant and hot tempered god who only kills and makes no positive contribution to the Yoruba community. The thesis argues that the notion of an African god should be viewed from an Afrocentric perspective, not a Eurocentric one, which might lead to violence or misrepresentation of him. The dialogue in the plays conveys how the playwrights have constructed their main characters as Ogun representatives in their society. For example, Mojagbe and Morontonu present Balogun, the chief warlord of their different community; both characters exhibit Ogun features of defending their community. The chosen plays for this study are selected based on different notions of Ogun, the Yoruba god of iron and war, presented by the playwrights. A closer look at the primary materials this thesis explores suggests Ogun’s strong connection with rituals and cultural festivals. These plays exemplify African ritual theatre. Being a member of the Yoruba ethnic group, I have considerable knowledge of how festivals are performed. The Ogun festival is an annual celebration among the Yoruba, where African idioms of puppetry, masquerading, music, dance, mime, invocation, evocation and several elements of drama are incorporated into the performances. The selected plays critiqued in this thesis are Mojagbe (Ahmed Yerima, 2008), Battles of Pleasure (Peter Omoko, 2009), Hard Choice (Sunnie Ododo, 2011), and Morontonu (Alex Roy-Omoni, 2012). No in-depth exploration has previously been undertaken into the kinds of textual and ideological identities that Ogun adopts, especially in the selected plays. Therefore, using a decolonial epistemic perspective, this study offers a critical examination of how the selected Nigerian playwrights between the years 2008 and 2012 have constructed Ogun, the Yoruba god of iron. Such a perspective assists in delinking interpretations from the modernised notions mentioned above, in which Ogun is sometimes a paradoxical god. Coloniality is responsible for such misinterpretation; the employed theoretical framework is used to interrogate these notions. The research project begins with a general introduction locating Ogun in Yoruba mythology, which forms the background to how the god is being constructed in Yorubaland. Also included iii in this first chapter is a discussion on a decolonial perspective, the principles of coloniality, the aims and objective of the study, and the relevant literature review. Thereafter, chapter two focuses on Battles of Pleasure and argues that the play re-imagines Ogun as a god of peace and harvest as opposed to a god of war and destruction. Chapter three discusses how Ododo’s Hard Choice reconceptualises Ogun as a god of justice, in contrast to him being interpreted as a god who engages in reckless devastation of life. Chapter four explores Ogun’s representation in Yerima’s Mojagbe as a reformer who gives human beings ample time to change from their wayward course to a course that he approves. In chapter five, Ogun’s reconception as a remover of obstacles in Roy-Omoni’s Morontonu is examined. The study concludes with a discussion on how Africans should delink themselves from a modernist Eurocentric perspective and think from an Afrocentric locus of enunciation. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (viii, 189 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Battles of Pleasure en
dc.subject Coloniality en
dc.subject Coloniality of being en
dc.subject Coloniality of knowledge en
dc.subject Coloniality of power en
dc.subject Decolonial epistemic perspective en
dc.subject Decoloniality en
dc.subject Hard Choice en
dc.subject Mojagbe en
dc.subject Morontonu en
dc.subject Ogun en
dc.subject Reconceptualisation en
dc.subject Reconstruction en
dc.subject Reimagination en
dc.subject South-West Nigeria en
dc.subject Yoruba en
dc.subject.ddc 822.914
dc.subject.lcsh Ogun State (Nigeria) en
dc.subject.lcsh Yoruba (African people) -- Historiography en
dc.subject.lcsh Literature and folklore -- Nigeria en
dc.subject.lcsh Nigerian literature (English) -- History and criticism en
dc.subject.lcsh Authors, Nigerian -- 20th century en
dc.subject.lcsh Nigerian literature (English) -- Sociological aspects en
dc.subject.lcsh Nigeria -- Drama en
dc.subject.lcsh Nigeria -- Religion -- Drama en
dc.subject.lcsh Yerimah, Amed P. -- (Amed Parker) -- 1957- en
dc.title Re-imagining Ogun in selected Nigerian plays: a decolonial reading en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department English Studies en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil.(English)


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