Citation
Abdulrahaman, Abdulwaheed Idris
(2020)
Women oppression and emancipation through application of amazonian and masculinist theories in selected novels by Nawal El Saadawi and Buchi Emecheta.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
Most researchers in the area of feminist discourse have focused predominantly on
patriarchal oppression on women, socio-cultural, political, economic, racial and religious
oppression on women. Attention has mainly been on the extraneous factors that bring about
oppression and discontentment to the lives of the women. This current study focuses on women
oppression by exploring the various aspects of maternal oppression on women as presented in
the selected novels of Nawal El Saadawi (Egypt) and Buchi Emecheta (Nigeria). The two female
novelists have been chosen for this study due to the sameness in their ideological pursuit
of maternal oppression on women and the strategy for emancipation as distinct from their
contemporaries who equally focus on women oppression but from extraneous perspective. This
current study therefore, focuses on women’s active contribution on the
oppression, suppression, and brutality of their fellow women. The oppressive tendencies executed on
the female victims by their fellow women resulted in misery, prostitution, perpetual unhappiness
and untimely death of the oppressed women. This aspect has hardly been explored. This current
study, through a textual analysis, intends to fill the gap by examining selected novels
of two female novelists from Egypt and Nigeria through application of Amazon feminism of Thomas
Gramstad (1999) and its concepts of Androgyny, or masculine-feminine duality of gender and
Masculinist theory of Chinweizu (1990) and its concepts of mother power, bride power and wife
power. The study examines selected novels of Nawal El-Saadawi’s Memoirs of a Woman Doctor (1989),
A Daughter of Isis (2002), and Woman at Point Zero (2015) and Buchi Emecheta’s Second
Class Citizen (1975), The Bride Price (2013) and The Joy of Motherhood (2013). The study
aims to investigate how maternal oppression on women is perpetrated in the selected novels using
the concepts of mother power, bride power and wife power as espoused in the Masculinist theory of
Chinweizu. I aim to explore the representation of female characters as the primary
architects of their fellow women’s oppression within the patriarchal set-ups by
employing Chinweizu’s Masculinist theory and its concepts as analytical tools. Lastly, the study aims to
discover how the oppressed female characters reappraised their oppressed selves, which
leads to their emancipation by applying Thomas Gramstad’s Amazon feminism and its concept of
“androgyny”. The study highlights the different forms of matriarchal oppression on women,
which are in the forms of female genital mutilation, preference for the male in all social
matters, and showing rejection in all matters relating to the female. In this study, the role
of androgyny is examined as the most suitable virtues required for the attainment of the
goal of gender equality and emancipation of the oppressed female characters. The study
further stresses that despite the perennial oppression of women as evidently portrayed
in the selected novels, with determined reappraisal, the oppressed androgynous heroines have been
able to change their oppressed status and attained emancipation. Further studies could be
conducted on women’s fictional narratives from East and South Africa to authenticate
whether or not the phenomenon of matriarchal oppression on women is
prevalent in other parts of the African continent.
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