TY - JOUR T1 - Space, Culture and Power in Buchi Emecheta’s Novel Called Kehinde TT - Space, Culture and Power in Buchi Emecheta’s Novel Called Kehinde AU - Oğuz, Ayla PY - 2017 DA - December JF - International Journal of Languages' Education and Teaching JO - IJLET PB - Bilim Eğitim Kültür Akademi Derneği WT - DergiPark SN - 2148-2705 SP - 65 EP - 72 VL - 5 IS - 4 LA - en AB - When it is considered related with power, possible meanings of space and culture gain a more importance. In postcolonial literary theory, power is introduced to be something in the hands of the people belonging to Western world. Due to this, the colonizer’s cultural knowledge about the colonized’s culture and space determines the social rank and location of non-Western people. Cultural superiority of western world over non-western world is formed due to power- knowledge relationship in postcolonial literary theory. According to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, knowledge in postcolonial context isn’t guiltless because it is the output of its producers. Thus, dominant power gives a new shape to such concepts like space, culture and power belonging to subordinate people. Within this context Buchi Emecheta’s interesting novel called Kehinde tells the story of a couple trying to decide on staying in London and returning to their own country, Nigeria. In the novel Kehinde as a female and her husband Albert as a male experience the multifaceted influence of both living in the center and belonging to periphery and reflect the influence of space, culture and power in their life, family and social circumference. Hence, it is anayzed in the study how Emecheta tries to show the reader the fact that power dominates everything and causes complication in man’s life referring to postcolonial literary theory while constructing the postcolonial identies in the novel. KW - Space KW - culture KW - subordinate KW - power KW - postcolonial KW - Emecheta KW - female CR - Adler, L. Gielen, U.P. (2003). Migration, immigration and emigration in international perspective. USA: Greenwood publishing. CR - Chattarjee, P.(2010). Empire and Nation: Selected Esssays. New York: Columbia University Press. CR - Emecheta, B. (1984). Kehinde. USA: Heinemann. CR - Francese, J.(Ed.) (2009). Perspectives on Gramsci: Politics, Culture and Social Theory. Oxon: Routledge. CR - Gramsci, A. (1971). Selections from the Prison Notebooks, edited and translated by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith. London: Lawrence and Wishart. CR - Mcleod, J. (2000). Beginning Postcolonialism. ManchesterManchester University Press. CR - Morris, R. (2010) (Edit.). Can the subaltern speak? Reflections on the history of an Idea. New York: Columbia University Press. CR - Morton, S. (2007). Gayatri Spivak: Ethics, Subalternity and the Critic of Postcolonial Reason. Cambridge: Polity Press. CR - Öncü, A. Wayland, P. (Der.). (2005). Mekân, Kültür, İktidar: Küreselleşen Kentlerde Yeni Kimlikler. Leyla Şimşek, Nilgün Uygun (Çev.). İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları. CR - Riach, G.K. (2017). An Analysis of Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s Can the Subaltern Speak. London: Routledge. UR - https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijlet/issue//1425672 L1 - https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/3684161 ER -