THE CONCEPT OF FEMINISM IN BUCHI EMECHETA’S SECOND CLASS CITIZEN AND OKOYE IFEOMA’S BEHIND THE CLOUDS

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ABSTRACT

This essay tends to explain what Feminism is all about. It tries to bring out the idea of feminism in two female writers work. (Ifeoma Okoye & Buchi Emecheta).
 The review of various disciplines on feminism has been used by the researcher to emphasis on the female characters who strove to fight for themselves. The right and freedom of African Women are what the researchers seeks to unravel.
 This will be carried out to portray Ifeoma Okoye & Buchi Emecheta as writers who celebrates feminism with the spirit of commoner’s living with their rights.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

CONTENTS         PAGES
Title Page          i
Certification          ii
Dedication          iii
Acknowledgement         iv
Abstract          vi
Table of Contents         vii

CHAPTER ONE
1.1 Introduction         1
1.2 Purpose of the Study       4
1.3 Scope and Limitation       5
1.4 Justification of Study       6
1.5 Methodology         7
1.6 Aim and Objective        8
1.7 Buchi Emecheta’s Background      9
1.8 Ifeoma Okoye’s Background      10
1.9 End Notes         11

CHAPTER TWO
2.1 Literature Review        12
2.2 End Note         16

CHAPTER THREE  
3.1 Introduction         17
3.2 Behind the Cloud        22

CHAPTER FOUR 
4.1 Introduction         25
4.2 Second Class Citizen       26

CHAPTER FIVE
5.1 Conclusion         34
5.2 End Note         39
5.3 Bibliography         40
INTRODUCTION

 Feminism is a branch of social theory (autism) which symbolizes the struggle for participation of women in a literary world dominated by men.
 In the African society, feminism has been deployed through a hostile barrier as the African culture itself regards it with so much disdain due to its belief that female emancipation and empowerment would jettison the essence of manhood as well as the roles of women in their matrimonial homes. 
 Femi Ojo-Ade (1983:158) African Literature Today views feminism as:  
 an accidental phenomenon that is gradually creeping into the forbidden land of African.
 Therefore, most of the African female writers preferred to be referred to as matherists/womanist instead of feminists because of the way feminism is believed to have ruined many homes then.
 Today, the feminist theory and in movement advocate a pattern of lifestyle, activities and mode of living.  An ideal woman should involve herself in the traditional African Societies, women were regarded as inferior, they dare not look their husbands or men in the face.  They were treated as housewives (almost servants) who must do all the domestic works and must always follow the dictates of their husbands without asking questions.
 This shows that the typical African woman is the obedient servant who must do all her husband’s biddings without as much as asking him to explain.
 This backward position of women in Africa contributed immensely to the late involvement of female writers.  Before the arrival of these female writers, their male counterparts have been presenting female characters as housewives, mothers, whore and dependent characters with their succor being men.  Such writers include, Meja Nwangi’s “Going Down the River Road”, Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart” and so on.
 But when the female writers emerged, things started changing.  Although, not all female writers are feminists but each writer shows different feminist trends.  The African female writers have conceived themselves with changing depreciating characters.  They faced their challenge with all courage, bravery and a daring heart.
 Viadimir Lemin sees women from a different point of view saying “we cannot go forward without women”.  He emphasizes more on women being the backbone, for any man for him to be successful thus proving right that common saying “Behind every successful man, there is a woman.”
 It is even more pitiable to realize that women had existed in the world almost as long as men had.  The woman was created with the man.  In the Biblical Garden  of Eden, woman was created a short while after the man had been created and if it is not for the woman (Eve), man (Adam) may never know a thing in the world.  It is not that women had just been created in the 18th Century when the revolution or the feminist moment started.  But man had dominated all activities in the world and would not allow for equality with the women so that women could be known and heard at the same time with men.  This has put women far behind the men folk in all areas of life, the political, economical, occupational and educational aspect of life inclusive.
 In most cases women are regarded as second class to men, they are not even recognized at all in some cases.  In Christian religion, women are admonished to be submissive to their husbands; doing only that which their husbands want them to do or approves of.  They must be very obedient and submissive; they must obey their husbands at all times and never refuse them anything even if it is not really convenient for the wives.
 “Therefore, as the Church is subject unto Christ, so let wives be to their  own husband in everything”
The result is that women were put behind men as their submissive helper (servant).
 Feminism is referred to as the belief that women should have economic, political and social equality with men.  Feminism is also referred to as a movement that works to gain such equality which movement is sometimes called the women’s liberation movement or women’s rights movement.
 In view of this, this research will focus on the effort of women writers to make this movement a reality in Africa.
 Women need to arise to stop what they do not want, and in particular to oppose whatever seeks to deny or deprive them of their rights.
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