Kehinde: Floundering between Two Opposite Worlds
Abstract
Buchi Emecheta’s novels are the fictionalised proofs that show the various forms of the marginalisation of black women in England because, as a black woman writer living in London, she reflects her own life within her writing. Furthermore, her works reflect the experience of the double colonisation that black women experience in Britain. In that respect, it could be said that these women are ‘colonised’ both within the British society outside, and the Igbo culture inside their household. In other words, this structure affects women both in public and private senses: they are subject to discrimination in the family and in the society. Actually, white citizens of England have not fully accepted and internalised the entrance of the black people to their own society. As a result, black people feel humiliated and marginalised. Especially, the black women are regarded as inferior both by the white males and females in British culture. Emecheta in her novel Kehinde writes about the people who are in transition and in conflict because of their in-between position within a multicultural society: they either cannot return to their own traditional values, or truly join the host society’s modern values. As a result, they flounder between two opposite domains.
In this article, Emecheta’s usage of the methods of “distance and participation” both through Kehinde’s and her husband Albert’s involvement and estrangement in London and Nigerian society will be evaluated. Furthermore, Emecheta’s depiction of women’s position in Igbo society as the other side of the ‘double colonisation’ of women (which actually means “triple colonisation” because of white men, white women and black men’s exploiting black women) will be analysed through Emecheta’s depiction of Igbo society as a patriarchal one which accepts the marginalisation of women as an essential principle of the continuation of their society.
Keywords
References
- Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths, Helen Tifflin. Key Concepts in Postcolonial Studies (London: Routledge, 1998). Berrian, Brenda F., “Her Ancestor’s Voice: The Ibeji Transcendence of Duality in Buchi Emecheta’s Kehinde,” in Marie Umeh (ed.), Emerging Perspectives on Buchi Emecheta (New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1996). Dawson, Ashley, Mongrel Nation: Diasporic Culture and the Making of Postcolonial Britain (USA: University of Michigan Press, 2007). Emecheta, Buchi, Head Above Water (Oxford: Heinemann, 1994). Emecheta, Buchi, Kehinde (Oxford: Heinemann Publishers, 1994). Fister, Barbara, Third World Women’s Literatures: a Dictionary and Guide to Materials in English (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1995). Hawley, John C., “Coming to Terms: Buchi Emecheta’s Kehinde and the Birth of a Nation,” Emerging Perspectives on Buchi Emecheta, in Marie Umeh (ed.), (New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1996). McLeod, John, Beginning Postcolonialism (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000). Nadaswaran, Shalini, “The Legacy of Buchi Emecheta in Nigerian Women’s Fiction,” International Journal of Science and Humanity, 2/2 (March 2012), p.146. Nath, Prasad and Juri Dutta, “Africa and India in the novels of Dai and Emecheta.” Comparative Literature and Culture. 14/2 (2012), p.2. Sizemore, Christine W., “The London Novels of Buchi Emecheta,” in Marie Umeh (ed.), Emerging Perspectives on Buchi Emecheta (New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1996). Umeh, Marie (ed.), “Igbo Women and Culture.” Emerging Perspectives on Buchi Emecheta (New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1996).
Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
-
Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Ela İpek Gündüz
*
Türkiye
Publication Date
May 1, 2014
Submission Date
April 1, 2014
Acceptance Date
April 15, 2014
Published in Issue
Year 2014 Volume: 11 Number: 1