Desiree 2
Desiree 2
Desiree 2
The third chapter Gender and Race Matters: Struggle and Survival,
Violence and Victimization in the Select Novels of Chimamanda Ngozi
Adichie emphasises the sufferings of women and men who undergo trauma
due to various factors in the novels Purple Hibiscus (2003) Half of a
Yellow Sun (2006) and Americanah (2013). The chapter probes into the
internal and external sufferings faced by the male and female characters.
Chapter – III
Gender and Race: Struggle and Survival, Violence and Victimization
Adichie focuses on difficulties and the various internal and external
conflicts encountered by both the genders. She attaches equal importance
and emotions to both female and male characters in her novels and
approaches gender issues from a very novel perspective. She defines
feminism in her famous TED talk “We should all be Feminist” “My own
definition of a feminist is a man or a woman who says, ‘Yes, there’s a
problem with gender as it is today and we must fix it, we must do better.’
(Adichie 14). In spite of being a woman she sympathises with men as they
are vulnerable and compelled to be strong. Both the genders undergo
positive feelings like happiness, love, satisfaction, hope, joy and motivation
and negative feelings like sorrows, traumas, imbalance and are even prone
to commit suicide. She further goes on to emphasise the fact that the
society is responsible for branding men as cowards when they reach out for
help during negative situations.
Gender conflict is an ensemble of many factors like society, culture,
economic crisis, unemployment, matrimony, ethnic restrictions, religious
differences, personal conflict and National disasters like wars or civil wars.
The division of gender and the national patriarchy system practiced in Igbo
has brought about double jeopardy in women. Violence both physical and
phycological is embedded in gender conflict. Adichie’s in her speech ‘We
Should All Be Feminists’ of gender opines “it prescribes how we should be
rather than recognizing how we are” (We Should All Be Feminists).
Gender and conflict are primarily dynamic in nature. To understand
Gender- conflict, it must be analysed as a separate entity. Gender is
determined biologically by the society and each gender is allotted roles
accordingly. Culture plays a key factor in that, it brings about social
division by assigning different roles for men and women in different class,
castes, societies, or countries. In The Second Sex, Simone de Beauvoir
voices out against the arguments that reiterated the fact that women are
inherently inferior to men because of their biological make up. Beauvoir
hence emphasizes the social nature of identity and therefore argues
emphatically that any apparent ‘nature’ of women is culturally based rather
than biologically given.
Nigeria before colonialism remained gender neutral to an extent
which is very evident from Chinua Achebe’s famous novel Things Fall
Apart. The novel elaborates the importance of the female goddess who
plays an important role by restoring Okonkwo’s daughter’s life. Okonkwo
plays a strong male chauvinistic role in the novel and yet bows to the
female goddesses viz. Igbo Ala, Anyanwu, Njoku Ji, Idemmili. One cannot
say that the Igbos are completely gender neutral because in the same novel
Okonkwo who bows to the female oracle beats his wife and even wants to
kill her. Male and female writers differ in their gender outlook even in their
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monster. He violently punishes the family when they do not obey his orders
and his own wife remains a voiceless entity in the house. A schedule is
drawn out for his children which should be monotonously followed without
argument. “Delicately framed, the character of Papa is evil and loving”
(Ndula 37), on several occasions Papa Eugene displays bipolar
phenomenon. He executes cruel punishments on his children and later he
sincerely apologizes as if nothing had taken place. His violence leaves the
family both physically and mentally damaged. His gaslighting effect
disturbs the entire happiness of the family.
His tyrannical and dictatorial nature and his over reactions over
trivial things in the house, arises from his internal conflict as he wants to
please God by being flawless in his rituals. Eugene has been holding the
family too rigidly by being a typical patriarchal product that has led to his
own wife poisoning him. Beatrice being oppressed, fights silently by
poisoning him as she is unable to bear the ill-treatment meted out to the
children in the cruellest manner. Mama Beatrice herself undergoes long
term physical and mental abuse in the hands of Eugene. Beatrice is very
submissive, and her reactions remain subdued towards her husband as she
is once again a societal product.
Women are ever ready to give their daughters in marriage to Eugene
as he has a good job and good flow of money. Igbo women give
importance to Papa Eugene because of his money as they know their
daughters won’t die of starvation, even if they must be beaten to death by
the husbands as it is a masculine trait. However, Papa Eugene does not
agree for another marriage and remains loyal to his wife. Beatrice remains
grateful to her husband for remaining monogamous in spite of her health as
she had difficulties in conceiving.
Mama always remembers Umunna urging Eugene to marry another
girl as it is an accepted custom in Igbo. A man of Papa Eugene’s stature
should marry another girl in order to extend his progeny. Even this seems
to be erroneous as it is seen that Beatrice loses her babies twice due to the
physical ill-treatment meted out by her husband. But Papa Eugene has been
magnanimous and never thought about second marriage. Eugene Achike is
loyal to his wife and he does not remarry another woman who would have
undergone the same treatment from him. Beatrice always believes that a
husband crowns a woman’s life and she venerates her husband which
forces her to remain silent.
Her life has been miserable from the day she married Eugene
Achike. His religiosity has always brought in adverse effects in the house.
Mama loses a couple of pregnancies due to his irrational behaviour. When
Beatrice fails initially to accompany Papa to wish the Parish Priest, Eugene
becomes furious and as a result, he beats pregnant mama resulting in a
miscarriage. Kambili recalls the horrifying scene where her mother is being
swung on her father’s shoulder with blood dripping all over the floor. The
children get emotionally affected as they witness their mother constantly
being abused by their father. It has a negative impact on the children who
always live in fear. Jaja declares to Kambili that together they will save the
baby from their father’s ill-treatment. The statement implies the measure of
fear and anxiety that is stored in the children’s heart.
In the beginning of the novel Purple Hibiscus Papa Eugene is angry
with Jaja and flings the Missal at him. But accidently it hits Mama
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from the fact that she does not have a man dictating to her as she is a
widow. Mama Beatrice represents the sad plight of all the uneducated
women in Nigeria who are solely dependent on men to sustain their lives.
Aunty Ifeoma is the educated, assertive, practical sister of Papa
Eugene who is a widow and the only person who speaks her mind to
Eugene. Aunty Ifeoma undergoes external conflict as she battles out trying
to make both ends meet with a single income. With all the ordeals that she
undergoes, she faces them with courage and strength and on no occasion is
found submissive. As a widow she independently handles her family
problems. Even though she struggles to raise her three children, she handles
life with determination. She gives the required freedom to her children and
corrects them at the most necessary time with love. Kambili watches her
cousins growing up in a pleasant atmosphere with awe. She has never had
the freedom to talk to her parents like her cousins cheerfully and whole
heartedly. Kambili is dumbstruck when she is seated at Aunty Ifeoma’s
dining table where life is fullest to the brim. Her cousins laughing, joking
and sharing ideas and opinions are much appreciated by her and serves as a
feast to her eyes.
Aunty Ifeoma faces insults and yet remains brave and courageous.
She remains calm when one of her neighbours accuses her of killing her
own husband. She also faces ill-treatment in the University as they falsely
accuse her of stealing question papers. Hence, she decides to migrate to
America in search of better opportunities. Aunty Ifeoma undergoes internal
struggle when she applies for an American Visa. She has to make several
visits to the embassy, standing in long queues in the scorching heat unsure
of receiving the visa which makes her tensed and confused. Likewise in
Purple Hibisucs, Amaka explains to Kambili the ill-treatment meted out to
the Nigerians by the American embassy. Amaka says “They insult you and
call you a liar and on top of it, eh, refuse to give you a visa” (PH 263).
Her education has made her independent and free-spirited while
Beatrice echoes the typical Nigerian woman, silent and submissive. It can
be understood that Beatrice’s marriage to Papa Eugene has given her an
economically secured life while Aunty Ifeoma, a widow struggles
financially to run her family. A gentle reminder is projected by the author
that men who earned are virtuous in protecting their family while an
educated woman working is found battling with life as her opportunities
available in world is less because she belongs to the weaker sex.
Kambili, the 15-year-old teenager, daughter of Eugene and Beatrice
keenly observes all the events happening to her and the others. Kambili
notices that the house reverberates in silence as the family seldom spoke. If
anyone spoke it is Papa Eugene who spoke always during breakfast, lunch
and dinner. There is an emptiness that hung on the walls of Papa Eugene’s
house. Loneliness and fear grip her and rule her heart and for most of the
days she just survived life. The family leads a monotonous life as Kambili
realizes this after observing life in Aunty Ifeoma’s house. She is so policed
by her father that she never knew life could be so beautiful until she meets
her cousins at Nsukka.
She suffers internally as her father creates an air of fear and anxiety
in her and also in the house. She bears Papa Eugene’s fury patiently as she
believes in him and adores him for his respectable position that had been
earned from his hard work. She constantly wants to please him by quoting
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words from the Bible and getting recognition from him. On the other hand,
she feels sad for her mother who remains voiceless and victimized in the
house and it is pathetic that she fails to understand herself being a victim.
She feels her father is harsh and unfair by illtreating her mother who has
sacrificed all her desires for his sake. Kambili’s internal confusion that
emerges from her silent observation takes a colossal toll on her mental
health. She narrates how her stomach feels funny, her bladder becomes full
and her legs lose strength on contemplating her father’s vehemence.
Her life at Nsukka helps her to analyse herself and thereby creates a
new way of thinking. There is a self – revelation inside Kambili in Aunty
Ifeoma’s place where she learns to smile, talk and even to check on the
varying emotions, in contrast to her own house where she knew nothing
beyond fear. Deep down in her heart she knows that this newness in her life
can be destroyed in seconds by her aggressive father. The saga of
aggressiveness seems to run throughout the narration of the novel. The very
thought of her father makes her undergo turbulence constantly that keeps
killing her peace and she is unable to focus on the present.
The revelation of her own likes and dislikes which comes from self-
analyses is an important turning point in the novel. It is born from
comparing her oppressed life with the temporarily liberated feeling that she
encounters at her aunt’s house. Her budding affection for Father Amadi, her
shyness, her desire to dab on lipstick, her feminine desires blossoms at
Nsukka. She is able to feel her emotions and experience happiness. She
realizes that her life is being smothered by her father who keeps taxing her
with schedules and penalties. Those lost days are made up in Nsukka at her
cousins’ place where she discovers her own self, liberated and happy.
It is normal and natural for a woman to yearn for colourful outfits
and make- up kits but in Kambili’s case even those natural desires of a
woman have been killed by her father. Her father objects to wearing of
pants as he believes that it tempts men therefore Kambili is given
permission only to wear skirts. When Aunty Ifeoma orders her to wear
pants to play football, Kambili remains silent and replies in her small voice
that her father never allows her to wear pants. The denial and betrayal of
killing her rightful desires are felt in her small choking voice as she feels
that her father has snatched away all her freedom. Kambili thoughts run as:
I wanted to talk with them, to laugh with them so much that
I would start to jump up and down in one place the way they
did, but my lips held stubbornly together. I did not want to
stutter, so I started to cough and then ran out and into the
toilet. (PH 141)
Amaka pinpoints to Kambili about her struggle in speaking and
introduces her to her own voice. She is surprised to listen to her own voice
for the first time in her life. She learns to speak more clearly and loudly
during her stay at Nsukka. Even Beatrice’s way of speaking is slow and
low as she also suffers from trauma and fear. Kambili watches her mother
speak slowly “She spoke the way a bird eats, in small amounts.” (PH 20).
Only Eugene’s voice thundered in the house while others are denied of
opportunities to speak. Kambili and Beatrice are scared of Eugene and
never raise their voice even when they are cruelly punished.
She tries to dab on lip stick for the first time at Nsukka and removes
it immediately as the very thought of her father gives her the creeps just
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thinking of the consequences. When Father Amadi recognizes the lip stick
in her hand, he appreciates the colour and wonders why she has removed it.
“I took Amaka’s lipstick from the top of the dresser and ran it over my
lips…I wiped it off. My lips looked pale, a dour brown. I ran the lipstick
over my lips again, and my hands shook” (PH 174).
Adichie says in her TED TALKS:
‘We Should All Be Feminists’ speaks “We teach girls’
shame. “Close your legs. Cover yourself.” We make them
feel as though being born female they’re already guilty of
something. And so, girls grow up to be women who cannot
say they have desires. They grow up to be women who
silence themselves. They grow up to be women who cannot
say what they truly think. And they grow up — and this is
the worst thing we do to girls — they grow up to be women
who have turned pretence into an art form.”
Kambili has been trapped for fifteen years by her father’s rigid rules
and schedules. Her freedom is curbed by him as he never allows her to
choose things for herself. Her mind never goes beyond her father and fear
and has never questioned her dependency on her father. She even
remembers her father choosing her confirmation dress that was so
expensive and royal that everybody in the church kept touching her dress.
Her father makes the choice for pride but sadly fails to recognize his
daughter’s desires. Adichie manifests in her book Dear Ijeawele, or a
Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions “Sadly, women have learned to
be ashamed and apologetic about pursuits that are seen as traditionally
female, such as fashion and make-up” (16).
Even Mama Beatrice waits for her husband’s consent in deciding
the curtains for the house. Mama Beatrice changes the curtains once in a
year and she always waits for her husband to choose the colour and the
texture of the curtain. Mama and women in general are mocked for their
indecisiveness which is symbolized through Eugene who decides on the
shades. Decorating houses, dining room, kitchen and curtains are women’s
domain and the choice is left to them but sadly Papa Eugene snatches away
even this little happiness from mama.
Papa Eugene’s punishments are always eccentric and brutal and is
enabled more by rigid faithfulness to his religious rituals that pushes him to
inflict severe punishment on his children. He punishes Kambili heartlessly
by pouring boiling hot water on her legs until the skin peels off. Mama
bandages the wounds neatly although she says nothing to the child about
the incident. Her cries and the pain that she undergoes silently is so
disturbing to her mother who is not allowed to save her child from the
punishment and is unable to articulate the domestic violence to anyone else.
O’Reilly writes Adrien Rich definition of mothering “Women’s mothering,
in other words, is defined and controlled by the larger patriarchal society in
which they live” (O’Reilly 7). Beatrice cries bitterly as she is unable to
defend her own children from her husband. Her bitterness and anger over
this issue ultimately leads to the catastrophic climax of the novel.
“Patriarchy’s foundation is the oppression of women. The cement of this
foundation is the socialization of men to hate women” (Hooks 75).
Obioma Nnaemeka claims that “Extreme pain and suffering push
women victims to the brink of madness” (Emenyonu 19). Towards the end
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of the novel her patient endurance with her husband is put to test by him.
Beatrice is forced to emancipate herself and her children from the grip of
her abusive husband by poisoning him. As she watches him pour hot water
on his children’s legs she decides to fight in silence with her autocratic
husband. She begins to add slow poison to his food as she is unable to
picture the future of her children with an abusive father. Her act of killing
him is not a decision taken at the spur of the moment. The idea of slow
poisoning him has been building up inside her due to anger and the
humiliation that she undergoes at his hands. His death has muted mama as
she feels guilty over her actions. She confesses this to her children “I
started putting poison in his tea before I came to Nsukka” (PH 290).
Adichie attaches power to women through Mama Beatrice by breaking the
long traditional Nigerian women’s standards of being submissive as she
gains freedom for herself and her children. Beatrice’s killing of her
husband displays the measure of the inner turmoil that she has suffered for
several years in silence and pain.
Papa’s fanaticism not only destroys his own children and wife but
even his own father’s life. Eugene’s belief in Catholicism forces him to
remain firm and harsh towards his family which makes him a spoil sport.
Once Kambili happens to swallow a pill for her monthly cramps before
leaving to the church, which is noticed by Papa Eugene who turns furious
as she has committed a sin by breaking the rules of the church. The entire
family gets lashed with his belt for his blind belief in Catholicism. He is
unable to understand a woman’s body and the hormonal changes and that
they too need a period of rest and medication if required. He never respects
the body of a woman when he turns angry and boisterous, he beats them
mercilessly.
On another occasion Papa finds Kambili holding a painting of her
grandfather Papa- Nnukwu who is considered a pagan by her father because
he is a traditionalist. Despite his warning she holds the picture for dear life
which infuriates her father. She is stamped on violently by her father with
his shoes and the iron buckle on his shoes hurts her so hard that her ribs
break. The power of a man is exhibited on his naive daughter almost killing
her. Kambili’s image of her father begins to crumble as she always looked
up to him as her hero. When she opens her eyes in the hospital, she watches
her father sitting close to her crying but her thoughts run to Father Amadi.
Eugene fails to exhibit affection which she receives in abundance from
Father Amadi. The fact that she has turned her attention to Father Amadi is
that she has lost faith in Papa Eugene. Eugene inflicts very harsh
punishments on Jaja and Kambili but Jaja begins to retaliate as he enters his
teens while Kambili is unable to defend herself as she is timid by nature.
The siblings are viewed differently as Jaja and Kambili belong to
different genders. Thus, adding more value to Jaja as he holds the rights to
his father’s properties. When it comes to marriage the village women view
Jaja as a potential partner as he becomes the legal heir to his father’s
properties. Therefore, it makes him rich and powerful, while Kambili is
seen in a different light because she is a female and has no hold on property
which makes her dependent on another male, as sadly the right to inherit
property is once again carved out by the society. Papa never punishes his
son because he is a man and is on par with him therefore, he executes his
cruelty on his women. This universal idea of favouring boys, placing them
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begins to disobey his father. His mind is constantly in war which is very
evident when he declares to his sister that they have to protect the baby
brother to be born. This decision clearly puts forth the amount of inner
struggle that he has undergoes which forces him to pass such a comment.
His matured remark on his deformed little finger to his cousins displays the
intensity of the inner conflicts in him that makes him hide the real fact from
the others.
Eugene’s nasty temper and rational behaviour has suppressed
Kambili and her voice is silenced out of fear. She wants to tell her mother
that she is sorry that papa has broken the figurines but words refuse to fall
into place. She therefore simply says “I am sorry your figurines broke,
Mama” (PH 18). Once she says she mumbled at the plate “I mumbled to
my plate, then started to cough as if real sensible words would have come
out of my mouth but for the coughing” (PH 105). Her subjugation has left
her mute while inner self is loaded with curiosity, questions. and
speculations. “…but the silence of the characters in Hibiscus is
overwhelming and so enslaving that is just that -bad and negative”
(Emenyonu 37)
Colonialism has had a negative impact on the Nigerians who have
encountered oppression and domination entrenched during colonialism.
Most of the Nigerians tried to ape the Colonizers which turned their own
people into enemies. Igbo is basically patriarchal in nature which can be
observed in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. The character Okonkwo is
the man of the house who refuses to exhibit his emotions openly and his
disrespect and anger towards his second wife during the peace week, leads
to his self – destruction. Similarly, in Purple Hibiscus during Palm Sunday
Papa Eugene’s anger destroys every one’s life. Both the characters,
Okonkwo and Papa Eugene are alike in exhibiting their domination over
the family especially women as they are the weaker sex.
The hierarchy travels in the Igbo clan where responsibility is passed
down to their sons after the father’s death and women remain insignificant.
This is very obviously seen in Obiora and Jaja who automatically assume
the position of protecting the family. Jaja imitates his cousin who plays the
role of the man of the family. Jaja goes to the prison for his mother’s crime
of killing his father. Men are attributed with the qualities of protecting the
family, the masculine dominance is obvious but it is ironical that it is
Mama who saves the family.
Papa Eugene is harsh in treating his family members only when
they disrespect church rituals. He acts like a monster; the patriarchal
dominance pushes him to brutally punish the family, but he always springs
back to his family during times of difficulty to find consolation in Mama
Beatrice and his children. Men are usually fragile and therefore Papa
Eugene easily breaks when things turn bad. Eugene’s violence is executed
only within the house but with others he is magnanimous and sympathetic.
When Ade Coker is killed, he sets up a trust in Coker’s name and facilitates
income for his family which is a genuine act of kindness displayed towards
the Cokers.
Papa Eugene’s external conflict hits the surface when he loses Ade
Coker, the editor of the Standard Magazine. Kambili describes her father’s
face that changes drastically after Ade’s death. While his inner struggle
crops up when he is unable to digest the fact that his editor has been
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murdered, he loses his confidence, strength and becomes feeble and is lost
in thoughts. Through Beatrice, it is made known that after the death of Ade
Coker, Eugene becomes sluggish in his activities.
As Nguyen states, the notion that “men are expected to be strong,
independent, and free, with their main role in the family being to provide
economic support, while the entire burden of housework and childcare is
expected to be borne by women” (20) is internalized inside men all over the
world. Jaja is no different in his view of life but changes when he meets his
cousin Obiora who is more responsible and enthusiastic about life. Like
Kambili his conflicts begin in Nsukka. The sense of responsibility is learnt
by Jaja at Nsukka unlike his home where everything is decided by Papa
Eugene and where he is never given an opportunity to shoulder
responsibilities. Jaja treats his mother with respect unlike his father. He also
accepts her crime and goes to jail instead of his mother thus displaying his
love and care for his mother in the novel. Jaja learns to be manly and at the
same time he learns how not to be like his father. Mama Beatrice
emancipates her children from Papa Eugene.
Kambili undergoes changes during her stay at Nsukka. Father
Amadi has a soft corner for Kambili and he helps her play football and they
even visit churches together. The adolescent conflict surfaces inside
Kambili and she is attracted to Father Amadi as he showers loads of
affection on her. All her life she has watched her father who is strict, rigid
and harsh who does not know how to respect a woman. She is taken up by
Father Amadi who displays kindness and is a gentleman. Father Amadi is
the first man in her life who has shown her kindness and respect which
makes Kambili fall in love with him. Although she is aware that he is a
catholic priest and she can never marry him, she waits with hope for him.
Kambili’s inner conflict about religion changes when she meets
Father Amadi. Her father practices Christianity in a rigid way that has
suffocated her, pushing her into questioning her faith in Christianity, while
Father Amadi practicing the same religion gives her freedom and
happiness. Similar religion but different outlooks have helped Kambili to
gain a full understanding of the religion. She realises that Christianity need
not necessarily be practiced in a rigid form to experience God. Her internal
conflict on men and religion undergoes a transformation in Nsukka
although not completely but to an extent.
When Father Amadi prepares to leave Nsukka, Kambili confesses
her love and promises to wait for his return. Deep down in her heart she
knows that he will not give up his priesthood as he is loyal to his faith. But
her wanting to stay with Father Amadi is simply that she wants the love and
care which she has not received in her own home. Kambili becomes vocal
about her feelings for the first time to Father Amadi as she is genuinely in
love with him. She feels secure when she is with Father Amadi as she is
pampered by him. He takes her to the market to braid her hair where the
woman speaks of their love, as Igbo women believe that only a man who is
deeply in love with a woman would bring her to braid her hair. Her
affection for him grows within herself and blossoms into a beautiful love
yet her conflict rises from reality of him being a catholic priest and she
finds it difficult to accept the truth. Kambili, undergoes external conflict at
the hands of her father. Her father abuses her physically: she is kicked, hit
badly with a belt, her feet burnt with boiling water and even her ribs are
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decisions and Olanna boldly rejects her father’s idea of hitching her with
another old rich Chief just to gain access to his wealth. Kainene, on the
other hand, takes up her father’s business like a man and acts
independently.
The conflict between the two main characters Olanna and Kainene
is obvious from the very beginning of the novel. Their relationship which is
strained in the beginning of the novel gradually becomes smoother towards
the end of the novel. The conflict begins between them as Olanna is
beautiful and Kainene is not although they are twins. This has always made
Kainene feel inferior and betrayed. The feeling of betrayal is made worse
when Kaniene discovers that Olanna has made love to her boyfriend
Richard. Their relationship remains bitter until the war sets in. The sisters
find solace in each other towards the end of the novel.
The Biafra War turns everybody’s lives miserable and horrifying.
Olanna escapes her death during the religious riots as she is not dressed
covering herself from head to toe. The rioters believe that women should
not expose their body, the idea emerged in an attempt to decolonize the
south easterners. They kill women who are not dressed properly or wear
Western clothes. The conflict here arises between tradition and modernity
which is very evident in the novel. A counter coup takes place with the
Igbo officers in Nigeria being killed. The northern part of the country
chants, “the Igbo must go. The infidels must go. Araba, araba!” (HYS 147).
According to George Uzoma Ukagba outlines the relation between race and
gender:
Race and gender are similar in terms of the imposition of
historical and cultural meanings on human biology. The
social meaning and roles attached to gender are similar to
race in that they are seen as part of the natural order which
includes the idea of men as ‘physically strong’, ‘bigger’ and
operates in the public sphere’ etc. In accord with the latter,
women are socially defined as ‘weak’, ‘small’, with the
‘potential of giving birth’, confined to “domestic matters”
and excluded from public sphere etc. (Ukagba 340)
But warfare involves many activities besides the exact contact
between armed men. Confessions of women from countries that have
known civil disturbances help to illustrate the ordeal of the female gender
and the challenges they grapple with during episodes of violence and civil
strife. (Virgili and Branche ch.12). Olanna is constantly found battling with
her life trying to balance her family, war, health and emotional wellbeing.
Her relationship conflict arises when she loses her trust with her lover
Odenigbo, as he has slept with the maid impregnating her. Though
Odenigbo has been tricked by his mother into involving himself with the
maid the incident shatters Olanna. Odenigbo’s mother’s inner conflict is
visible from her actions as she is unable to accept Olanna as her daughter-
in- law because she feels that she is too modern and too learned. Olanna
forgives her revolutionary lover yet the trust she had placed on him reduces
a degree.
In the refugee camp Olanna suspects her husband’s uncanny
behaviour that she becomes doubtful about her husband having an affair
with the Asaba woman, Alice. Although, Odenigbo claims that there has
been nothing between them Olanna is not convinced. She loses the little
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respect that she has for Odenigbo for the second time. Olanna’s mental
strength fluctuates as she finds her relationship with her husband keeps
turning colder from day to day. Despite all the misgivings she sticks to him
with a doubtful eye and a cold heart.
Olanna has been very faithful in her relationship with Odenigbo
until the first affair which pushes her to make love with her sister’s fiancé
Richard. The act is merely an act of vengeance, just to avenge her
boyfriend’s unfaithfulness to her. Her relationship with Richard, though
superficial, angers Kainene who is not willing to forgive her almost till the
end of the novel. Adichie creates a jigsaw puzzle in order to break the
conventional portrayal of women. She gives power to women who take
decision and accord punishments to their men. She places women on the
dominating side and men on the submissive side.
When she hears the news of Amala’s pregnancy she is annoyed and
irritated. But Olanna adopts Amla’s child as she is unable to conceive after
putting in a lot of effort. Olanna feels that she will be looked down by the
society due to her barrenness. Her reaction to Amala’s pregnancy disturbs
her so emotionally that she squeezes her stomach brutally for not becoming
pregnant. Subconsciously there is her inner conflict of being useless and
barren which makes herself feel inferior. When Amala is gifted with a girl
baby, she rejects the baby because it is a ‘girl’ and even refuses to look at
the baby. Olanna determinedly brings the baby home and raises the child as
her own. But deep inside her is the feeling of not giving birth to her own
child.
Olanna and Odenigbo’s relationship remain intact even though they
undergo a few ups and downs but gradually loses essence with time. The
war and its offshoots namely starvation, displacement and poverty greatly
have adverse impact on Olanna and Odenigbo’s sexual life. The happy sex
in the beginning of the novel slowly occupied with fear and anxiety, thus
leading to a collapse in their peaceful partnership.
The war has made women independent as they hold the sole
responsibility of caring for the family. The war unravels the potentiality of
the hidden talent of women and qualities of boldness, strength, and
courageousness. This venture by the women folk breaks the traditional
ideas created by the patriarchal society that have suppressed them for
several years. Olanna performs the role of a male in the family making
major decisions, changing currencies in the bank and going in search of
petrol. Similarly, in the Relief Centres she learns the art of tricking the
soldiers and escaping the floggings. Olanna is excellent in socializing,
rendering help to others and makes everyone feel at home with her
humbleness. She adapts herself easily to the war crisis, she even learns the
art of making chalk and soap. She is productive and is passionate about
teaching and hence she teaches solidarity helping the children to sing
Biafran patriotic songs to children in the backyard
In the case of Biafra, although their role was predominantly
non- combative (reflecting, no doubt, the gender politics of
the time), the burden of suffering and responsibilities not
less. This suffering is a strong thematic link in women’s war
narratives, whether of the immediate post-war period or
those which have emerged from what is now called the
16
house, he keeps imaging the way Olanna laughs, speaks and commands
him. Whenever he looks at Olanna his urge for sex arouses. Ugwu
fanaticises having sex with Nnesinachi, a girl from his village. He satisfies
his sexual desire with Chinyere. Apart from sex they never conversed or
shared thoughts. He loves to overhear the sounds and moans when
Odenigbo and Olanna make love in the bedroom. He always fanaticises
touching Eberichi’s neck until one day he openly asks her to show her
private parts to him. Ugwu searches for consolation in form of bodily
pleasure and his age plays a significant role. The war also leaves him
traumatized and he is worried that he might be killed in action and hence
craves for sex.
War situations generate conditions for rape and mental and physical
abuses on women in addition to obvious trauma thereafter. Some of these
traumas are evident in the recorded history of the armed violence in
Nigeria. Most of the Nigerian war novels involve rape during war times.
The character Rachel in Ejeuru’s novel and Debbie in Emecheta’s novel
represent the Nigerian Civil war atrocities that left women striped off their
dignity violently and brutally. Sexual violence is very common when a war
occurs in a particular place and Nigeria faces a lot of sexual violence.
Ugwu’s sibling Anulika is unable to converse much with her brother after
his return from the war. He later on learns from Nnesinachi that Anulika
was gang raped by five vandals who beat her almost to death and forced
themselves on her. Her eye is left permanently damaged due to the heavy
beatings that she received during the rape.
Ugwu himself is forced to join the army where men exhibit their
manliness during the opportune time and thus as a token of pride, he rapes
an Igbo bar girl who glances at him with complete disgust. Similar to
Debbie in Buchi Emecheta’s Destination Biafra who undergoes the same
treatment as the bar girl in Half of a Yellow Sun who is brutally raped by
the Nigerian and Biafran Soldiers. This act of shame is purely conducted to
exhibit the men’s superior power over women and how they considered
women as the weaker sex deep down in their hearts.
The war makes men demonstrate their power over women and girl
children. Men from both the armies and the vandals violently rape women
folk hard-heartedly.
Countering Sexual Violence in Conflict by Jamille Bigio and
Rachel Vogelstein indicates that Sexual violence in conflict zones can be
employed as a deliberate tactic to terrorize civilians. The victims are either
left traumatized, dead, or killed by the soldiers.
The most shameful act is the one executed by a catholic priest,
Father Marcel who sexually harasses young children at the settlement who
come knocking at his door for food. Urenwa, a refugee girl, is impregnated
by Father Marcel taking advantage of the situation. He sexually abuses
them and then gives food as the children are keen on saving themselves
from starvation. Similar to Achebe’s protagonist Gladys in Girls at War
joins a group of prostitutes and is ready to sleep with men for the sake of
stock fish. Father Marcel a prevaricator, claims himself to be a priest just to
avoid joining the war. To satisfy his erotic desires, he watches Olanna
having a bath. Father Marcels disgusting behaviour can never be forgiven.
Arize is Olanna’s favourite cousin who is economically below
poverty but lives happily with her parents. Olanna bonds better with
19
smoking. Whenever Olanna shows the photo to the other women in the
camp their jaws drop. They are so puzzled as they have never seen a
woman smoking.
Kainene visits the refugee camp regularly trying to help and save
lives of men, women and children dying in starvation. She takes care of a
refugee camp independently and runs it confidently. She is intelligent,
brave, educated and above all gives a totally new dimension to Nigerian
Women. She distributes relief materials and writes letters and gets protein
tablets supplies for children as a supplement for food. Her external conflict
arises when she is unable to satisfy the people in the refugee camp. She
renders maximum help and even risks her life by crossing the enemy lines.
Sadly, she never comes back till the end of the novel although Olanna and
Richard wait with hope. She even launches a “Plant Our own Food
Movement” (Adichie, HYS 398), which reveals her independent character.
She does not want to depend on anyone. She plans to cross the enemy
border to do trading for the sake of her people. She risks her own life even
though she knows her life is in danger.
Richard, a white journalist is a serene character etched by the
author. He falls in love with Kainene and undergoes inner turmoil from not
being unable to comprehend Kainene’s mind of whether she is in love with
him or not. Her actions and speech often confuse him and make him
restless. His affair with Olanna causes a rift in this relationship with
Kainene. He suffers from his own guilt and is in conflict with himself
whenever he has to meet Olanna. For most of the time he avoids Olanna
and during inevitable situations he turns his head away from her. His good
friendship with Odenigbo changes after this incident which makes them
feel uneasy when they have to face each other. Kainene is more of
androgynous and therefore dominates Richard and he remains on passive
mode in making advances towards Kainene.
The author brings out the difference between a man having an affair
with woman and vice- versa. When Olanna becomes aware of Odenigbo’s
relationship with Amala and Alice, she is tormented by her inner sufferings
and she bottles it up inside her. She then plans an ambush and penalizes
Odenigbo by sleeping with Richard. When Olanna confesses her guilt of
having slept with Richard, Odenigbo loses his temper, and picks up a
quarrel with Richard. Olanna has every opportunity to hush up everything
without Odenigbo’s knowledge but she boldly confesses the truth to him.
She seems both happy and unhappy about her unabashed action. She is
happy that she has hurt her husband and at the same time regrets for being
so petite and disloyal to her husband. In contrast Odenigbo is never vocal
about his affairs and lies to Olanna who learns of it by herself. Olanna tries
to teach a lesson to Odenigbo that both sexes have power to commit
mistakes.
Most of the men are disoriented and remain paralyzed due to the
war while women draw strength for homosocial relationships. Mama Oji
and Mrs. Moukelu gain Olanna’s friendship and is a good companion to
Olanna. She teaches her to make soap and helps her buy medicines, she
serves like a mentor to Olanna. Alice, the Asaba woman, who refuses to
speak to anyone, reveals her past to her. Olanna develops a soft corner for
Alice and shares a little of whatever she receives in the parcel. Adanna is
disliked by most of them in the camp yet they do not exhibit it and instead
21
maintain a rapport with her. The war thus brings women from different
places and background close to each other and helps them to share their
inner struggles and burdens and also console each other.
The novel Americanah propels around Ifemelu and Obinze whose
relationship undergoes bitter transitions and also suffer from identity crisis
that leads them to suffer internally and externally. “Everybody is
conflicted, identity, this identity that” (Am 217). The novel is built on
humiliation, challenges and struggles encountered as immigrants in other
countries. They are mocked at for their colour and complexion even in the
21st century. The scar created by racism cannot be erased from history
therefore when revisiting history, one is able to understand the viciousness
involved in racism. Racism is an issue that occupies a major place in
Literature, Politics, News and History and can destroy a person’s life and
nullify happiness and self- image. In Orientalism, Edward Said shares his
opinion on the ‘other’ is inevitable in a European colonized area. There is
always ‘us’ and ‘them’ where ‘them’ is considered abnormal and portrayed
negatively. The novel Americanah echoes the sufferings that coexisted
along with racism: Sexual harassment, betrayal, unhappiness, domestic
abuse etc.
In Americanah Ifemelu’s inner struggle emerges when she finds
herself unable to follow the American culture and yearns for Nigeria. This
can be witnessed when one delves into her three relationships - Obinze,
Curt and Blaine. Her true lover Obinze and her relationship with him is so
magical although they do not share anything much in common when it
comes to interests and hobbies. Their magnetic mutual love is envied by
everyone. When she goes to America, she encounters a transactional sex
with a tennis coach as she needs money to pay her bills. Out of guilt,
Ifemelu goes into a period of silence cutting off all connections with
Obinze as she feels that she has betrayed him. She withdraws from the
society and her boyfriend as she goes into a temporary depression. Her
traumatic encounter with the coach ultimately pushes her into silence and
ends her relationship with Obinze. Her personal conflict rises when she is
unable to fix her silence in her relationship with him. Obinze does not give
up on Ifemelu easily as he keeps reaching out to her with e - mails and
phone calls which is not reciprocated.
Ifemelu works as a baby- sitter in Kimberly’s house where she first
meets Curt. Curt is Kimberly’s cousin, a White Caucasian software
developer in America who falls in love with her. He is both wealthy and
handsome and hails from Baltimore who adores Ifemelu immensely.
Initially, Ifemelu hesitates to accept his love as he is a white but later agrees
to his proposal. Curt is very caring and concerned about Ifemelu and
provides the best for her. He respects her background and appreciates her
colour and hairstyle.
When Ifemelu tries to straighten her hair with relaxers which leaves
her scalp damaged, Curt calms her down and helps her to recoup her hair
back to its original self. Her relationship with Curt ends as she is unable to
fill the void left by Obinze. She makes love with a man named Rob who
lives in her apartment. When she happens to run into him in the lift, she
satisfies her carnal pleasure. Her self-confession about the incident to Curt
leaves him hurt and broken, and draws an end to their relationship. Adichie
draws her female characters with dauntlessness as Ifemelu and Olanna
22
disclose their mistakes of their fiancés. Ifemelu ruins the luxurious life that
she gains in America through Curt. After the breakup she desperately wants
to meet Curt but he rejects her for her betrayal. Her dilemma becomes
intense when she realizes that she is not satisfied with Curt and that has led
her to have sex with a stranger. Her thoughts go back to Obinze who is the
only person who could make her feel whole and regrets her decision for
having avoided him.
Her third relationship with Blaine an African- American professor
and an activist remains strained. His constant nagging and his involvement
in protests make Ifemelu detest him. He mocks her and her blog which
annoys her and feels suffocated in her relationship with him. Her thoughts
run back to Obinze as he is the only one who can make her complete and
happy. This brings in a fissure in her relationship with Blaine and she
leaves him yearning to go back to Obinze.
Ifemelu takes a courageous decision of rejecting her new life with
the White and the African American. She wants to go back to her native
land Nigeria by rejecting America which gave her luxuries and
opportunities. Metaphorically referring to going back to Obinze by
rejecting her two American boyfriends. “She rested her head against his
and felt, for the first time, what she would often feel with him: a self-
affection. He made her like herself. With him, she was at ease; her skin felt
as though it was her right size” (Am 61).
Obinze’s mother, a very strong independent widow, courageously
leads life amidst numerous problems. She is a posh, educated lady who
creates a place for herself in the society despite having to face many battles.
She is a connoisseur of art, music and books. She brings up Obinze as an
obedient and disciplined child and gives him freedom and all her
knowledge. In an incident that takes place in the university Obinze’s
mother is caught up in a heated argument with a male professor. She gets
blamed for stealing question papers and amidst the argument receives a slap
from the male professor as he feels that a woman should never raise her
voice against a man. “and slapped her and said he could not take a woman
talking to him like that” (Am 59). Some of the female students demand
justice for the ugly incident.
She tolerates all the insults silently and yet she leads a successful
life raising her son to become a real- estate entrepreneur. She instils the
love for foreign countries and is stubborn about getting her son to settle
abroad as she is worried that Nigeria lacks opportunities. Her matured way
of dealing with Obinze and Ifemelu’s relationship shows both her concern
and affection towards them. Ifemelu recalls in her memories, Obinze
introducing her to his mother at his home while studying in the school. It is
a new experience to Ifemelu and she admires Obinze’s mother for showing
concern about their affair which normally does not happen in Nigeria. She
approves of their relationship with one condition that Ifemelu should report
to her when they are planning to have sex. She educates Ifemelu on the
consequences of having sex before marriage. She explains to Ifemelu that
when a boy and girl experience sex, it is both male and the female who
commit the mistake but nature is so unfair that it punishes the women. She
is an ultra-modern mother, open minded about things and knows when to
be strict and when to remain calm. Ifemelu admires her for her honesty and
straightforwardness.
23
she feels that he has no rights to pass comments on Nigerian girls or their
dressing. Aunty Uju glares at her for arguing with Bartholomew fearing he
might leave her. Even though it does not happen, Ifemelu earns
Bartholomew’s hatred for her. So much for a superior gender that Ifemelu’s
statement touches the ego of the man that he decides to ignore her for the
rest of his life.
Aunty Uju’s dependency on a man can be seen when she makes
wrong decisions. The first mistake is her choosing a married man the
General in Nigerian that earns a bad name for her. And back in America
she makes a wrong choice of choosing Bartholomew who does not care
about the family. Aunty Uju in Nigeria is stuck to the general for his money
while in America it is vice versa. She needs Bartholomew for security.
Even Ifemelu’s argument with Bartholomew causes Aunty to fear that he
might abandon her. Aunty Uju always leads a desperate and dependent life.
Her top priority is money and rich lifestyle and for which she literally sells
herself to a married man.
Her relationship with Bartholomew in America remains cold and
uncertain unlike her relationship with the General in Nigeria. The General
in Nigeria was loving and displayed concern for her and Dike, while
Bartholomew never shows any love and respect either for her or for Dike.
Adichie draws a parallel with aunt Uju’s life with the General in Nigeria
and her life with Bartholomew in America. Aunt Uju’s life in Nigeria was
wrapped with love and happiness while her stay in America is so uncertain
and unhappy.
Adichie infuses Racism, Sexism and Gender in the novel
Americanah. Where Ifemelu’s maiden experience in America is a confused
one that makes her run back to Nigeria to her roots. “To My Fellow Non-
American Blacks: In America You Are Black, Baby” (Am 220). Ifemelu, is
an ideal immigrant exhibiting elements of W.E. B. Du Bois’s Cultural
Frame Switching by flitting between her Nigerian and American
sociocultural spaces.
“Like all women, Black women were objects to be seen, enjoyed,
purchased, and used, primarily by White men with money” (Collins; Part
1). When Ifemelu goes to America she is sexually exploited by a tennis
coach. He takes advantage of her economic situation and colour thus
utilizes her for his bodily comfort. The incident leaves a negative impact on
her where she turns her anger towards herself by isolating herself from the
world. Psychologists say that once a person is guilty soon depression
follows. She is not only subjected to sexual harassment because of her
gender but also because of her colour. A reminder of colonialism is struck
by Adichie where black women are taken for granted by the Whites. When
Ifemelu goes to a gas station seeking for a job the man glances at her chest
and asks her to work for him in another way. Annoyed, Ifemelu leaves the
place without a job. “Historically, Black women have been constructed as
sexually immoral women” (Collins; Part 1).
She gets out of her depression and makes use of the opportunity and
starts her own blog, Raceteenth or Various Observations About American
Blacks (Those Formerly Known as Negroes) by a Non -American Black
where she recognized issues pertaining to race, culture and body shaming.
She addresses both positive and negative issues in her blog. Falola claims
that “African students have served as culture couriers and keen observers of
25
black students who vents her anger on him, claiming that the Africans sold
their ancestors as slaves. The racial conflict and identity have been at stake
in the African – Americans.
The stereotyped statement about Africa annoys Ifemelu. When Don
and Kimberly throw a party at home the whites are surprised looking at
Ifemelu and keep on telling her about the charity work that they are doing
in Africa. Ifemelu regrets listening to the Whites and wishes that Africa
should have been on the other end of giving rather than be the one
receiving the aid. Especially Laura, Kimberly’s sister calls Africa
‘Horrible’ which is the image of Africa that every white embrace in their
mind. The Whites’ statement on AIDS is a generalized one that makes
Ifemelu feel like every African possesses this disease. Adichie argues this
issue in her famous speech ‘The Danger of a Single Story’ where she
claims that people hear stories from a source or one’s point of view and
believe in that story to be the story of all the people in Africa.
There is an argument that young children are unable to identify
racial discrimination which is not true according to Katz, a social
psychologist who says that children at a very early are able to identify
group differences that is black versus white. They feel bad for the dark skin
colour and at a very early age they develop self – hatred. Likewise, Uju’s
son Dike undergoes a bitter experience in America where he is taunted for
his colour. The incident where the girl refuses to give him the sunscreen
lotion as she feels that Dike does not need to use it because of his skin
colour. This creates a self- hatred in him for possessing a dark skin. His
turmoil regarding identity and colour eats his mind as he enters into his
adolescence. In his trauma he attempts suicide but is saved.
Nigeria’s perennial problem of unemployment and poverty push
most of the Nigerian children to dream of migrating to America as it
promises more jobs and comfort materialistically. But race and colour
intimidate the Nigerian settlers in America who even experience depression
and are forced to commit suicide. Racism in America killed most of the
Blacks physically and mentally. Dike’s negative experience and his internal
and external conflicts are the representation of the many blacks living in
America by Adichie. She also brings out the double consciousness
experienced by Ifemelu and Uju. The concept was introduced by W. E. B.
Du Bois, in his work The Souls of Black Folk where he speaks about the
two- ness felt by the Blacks- one the American and the other Negro. The
two souls are constantly in conflict and ache to live in harmony without
being mocked by the Americans.
Racial conflict unwinds itself in another episode in America when
the carpet cleaner’s disgust towards black is made visible when he sees
Ifemelu a black answering the doorbell. He is relieved when he learns that
she is only a helper at Kimberly’ s house and then acts friendly with her.
His hostile feeling represents the White’s feelings for the blacks at large.
The big picture is that even if Ifemelu owns a big house, he would have still
detested her for her colour. Racial conflict stirs the feeling of unwantedness
of Blacks by the Whites in America. Ifemelu faces racial challenge and
migrant conflict when she is in America. Her culture and identity are
questioned by the Americans. The black man mocking at her hair, finding a
job, being sexually assaulted by the sports man and her changing of
27
boyfriends indicates that she has been constantly battling with her external
environment.
In one of Ifemelu’s blog on ‘how dark women go unnoticed in
America’ quotes and appreciates Barack Obama for recognizing and
marrying a dark black woman, Michelle Obama. Unlike other blacks they
remain unique in respecting their culture. While the other blacks prefer to
have a mixed ancestry as light skinned blacks become the most successful
in America. The black women rejoice reading her post on the blog.
Ifemelu’s blog becomes a massive hit among the black Americans in
America that she gains millions of readers yet she is being slammed and
criticized for her blogs.
The Ethiopian driver warns Ifemelu of assimilation which makes
her become furious. The driver looks at her tight dress and advises her not
to let America corrupt her. She is aware that the African immigrant is
always conscious of America changing the Africans from their own culture.
She is able to sense the driver’s endless fear of being torn between worlds
yet is found working in America ironically trying to protect Africa.
She feels that there is a certain gap between the Whites and herself.
When she is surrounded by Curt and his friends, she is unable to mix with
them as their language is too American. She feels that she will never be
able to relate to them completely. Similarly, Obinze undergoes racial
conflict in England. His struggle as an immigrant in England, is displayed
crisply over a few episodes in the novel Americanah. According to his
mother’s wish Obinze moves to England illegally. Two Angolans
orchestrate a wedding between an unknown girl and Obinze in order to gain
citizenship. The Angolans fleece illegal immigrants’ money as they are
aware of the fact that they had no other option but to depend on them.
The African immigrants’ struggles are revealed through Obinze
during his first month in England at his new work spot. He takes up a
menial job of cleaning the toilets. Initially he is fine with his job until one
fine day he finds dirt smeared all over the toilet lid that makes him quit the
job. While working in England he runs into a Ghanaian girl who refuses to
strike a conversation with him as he is a black and moves only with the
whites. Obinze learns that the African immigrants try to create an artificial
identity by moving only with the whites as if it would make them erase
their black origin. Obinze is able to sense immigrants being in a continuous
conflict.
Emenike, his friend seems happy and satisfied in his reinvented
identity. He does not appear to miss Nigeria and will not be visiting Nigeria
likely anymore as he boasts to Obinzie that his wife will not survive a day
in Nigeria. He has made the word ‘Nigeria’ sound very obscene. Obinze is
shocked to see that his friend has become totally westernized and wealthy.
Emenkie has deliberately expunged Nigeria from his life and has actually
certified Nigeria as an unsuitable place for his wife. He has not only
undergone an external transformation but also feels ashamed to talk about
his native land. Adichie brings out the limitations of the Black immigrants
abroad through Ifemelu and Obinze. Though legal or illegal they suffer the
same measure of insults and unhappiness. As immigrants it does not change
anything if one is female or male as they suffer equally and undergo trauma
in various forms.
28
Aunty Uju keeps reiterating the fact that American- Africans have
to face too many issues. Ojiugo’s statement that whites convert everything
into a mental problem and this is true in the case of Ginika who tells
Ifemelu that she is depressed. Depression is very common in Western
countries though it is unheard of in Africa. Dike falls a victim to depression
and his suicide attempt displays Dike has merged into American culture.
Ifemelu’s self-conflict is immeasurable from the day she enters
America. Although she gains confidence and tries self-fashioning, she
never seems satisfied with anything. She is regularly being taunted for her
colour, looks and weight. She enters into a period of depression as she is
unable to synchronize with the American culture and language. Initially she
becomes a product of American culture but later realizes that in the process
she has lost her own identity which leaves her annoyed and disgusted with
herself. Ifemelu is able to relate to Dike’s depression as he has experienced
the same discrimination.
As Pecola in Toni Morrison’s Bluest Eye and Celie in Alice
Walker’s The Colour Purple writes that God’s skin is white with blue eyes
has been internalized in every African. They always imagine God as White
in colour. As Naomi Wolf claims in her book The Beauty Myth that the
images of beauty forces women to adhere to higher standards of artificial
beauty in order to keep up with the societal norms.
Ifemelu’s beauty issues increases when she goes to America where
she is constantly conscious about her hair and physique. The comment
passed by an individual in the supermarket annoys her that she keeps on
looking at herself in the mirror checking her physique and weight. The
novel opens with Ifemelu sitting in a hair salon waiting for her hair to be
braided. As she is very self-conscious of her hair, she tries to straighten her
hair using relaxers which damage her hair and therefore ruins her beauty.
Her struggles to bring back her hair to normal condition which takes a
period of time yet all these trials and errors was just to make a place in the
American society. The very fact that she wins millions of hearts through
her blog proves that beauty isn’t a necessary and to come to this position it
took a long-drawn conflict for Ifemelu.
The colonizers have brainwashed the natives who believed that the
colour white is superior and therefore God belonged to the whites. As much
as possible they mimicked the whites to please God. They also made them
believe that the colour black is inferior and therefore they were exploited
by the Europeans and the Christians priests. Above all they have made
them follow the Catholic rituals in order to make themselves feel on par
with the whites. To sum up they can only mimic their rituals but can never
match their skin colour.
When she made a U-turn and went back the way we had
come, I let my mind drift, imagining God laying out the hills
of Nsukka with his wide white hands, crescent-moon
shadows underneath his nails just like Father Benedict’s.
(PH 73)
In PH Kambili notes that “Even though Father Benedict had been at
St. Agnes for seven years, people still referred to him as “our new priest.”
Perhaps they would not have if he had not been white” (PH 4). Adichie
brings out the mentality of the blacks who revered the colour white through
Kambili. She also notes that her father Eugene always sat beside the “blond
29
life size Virgin Mary” (PH 4). In contrast she compares a painting at home
where the Virgin Mary is white in colour whereas in Amaka’s room the
painting bore dark skin colour. The author brings out the fact that colour
has nothing do to with faith but the whites have made them believe that
God is white and made the blacks feel inferior.
Adichie gives a different perspective of gender where she draws the
sufferings and humiliations faced by both male and female. Further
analysing religion and culture which intersects gender, weighs more on
both women and men confining them to limitations and subjecting them to
rules and regulations.
30
31
Chapter – V
Summing Up
“Conflict is inevitable, but combat is optional.”
-Max Lucado
novel with a note of hope where Olanna’s waiting for Kainene symbolically
represents Nigerians waiting for Nigeria to turn into a peaceful country.
Adichie’s third novel Americanah (2013) set in the year 2009 brings to
light Nigeria’s political instability that pushes the Nigerians to seek
opportunities outside the country. Adichie through her characters in the
novel exhibits the Nigerian’s desire to leave the country in search of jobs
and better living. Even while Obinze is studying in school his mother thrust
her thoughts onto her son that Nigeria has no scope and therefore, he must
prepare himself to leave the country. His mother encourages him to read a
lot of English books and creates an obsession for the United States in him.
“Obinze had a fixation with the United States, particularly Manhattan, and
with “proper books” (AM 67). Similarly, When Ginika their classmate,
announces that she and her family are immigrating to America, her
classmates become excited and at the same time they envy her for leaving
the country. Possessing an American Passport is the dream of every
Nigerian student. There are too many strikes and riots at Nsukka University
which makes living difficult in Nigeria and compels students to enrol
themselves elsewhere. Thus, Nigeria was losing its best human resources
and the political leaders failed to address this issue as they are engaged in
their own greed and corruption.
The third chapter Gender and Race Matters: Struggle and Survival,
Violence and Victimization in the Select Novels of Chimamanda Ngozi
Adichie observes the sufferings of women and men due to various conflicts
in Nigeria in her novels Purple Hibiscus (2003) Half of a Yellow Sun
(2006) and Americanah (2013). The rate of gender violence is high
especially in postcolonial countries. Adichie believes that gender conflict
can be overcome by gender equity. She has etched her female characters as
powerful and independent. Domestic conflict happens every day and is
inevitable and affect one’s physical, mental, emotional and spiritual
wellbeing. Adichie’s female characters do not submit easily as they are
empowered characters. Adichie unravels the conflicts faced by men and
women in Nigeria due to various others conflicts. In Purple Hibiscus
(2003) the protagonist Kambili and her mother Beatrice undergo domestic
violence from Eugene Achike’s hands. They silently suffer as they are
unable to voice out their problems as they are females and are expected to
tolerate the man of the house by the society. According to Nigerian society
an ideal woman is one who is submissive and remains mute when men
inflict violence on them. Beatrice and Kambili are punished cruelly by
Eugene when they fail to follow the Catholic practices. Adichie displays
cruelty at its peak when pregnant Beatrice is bashed up so brutally that she
loses her pregnancy a couple of times and Kambili is nearly killed as her
father stamps her violently and breaks her ribs. The role of Adichie’s
women characters are dynamic in nature as they undergo a series of
changes. Adichie juxtaposes two types of Feminism namely African
Feminism and Radical Feminism. African Feminism is when a woman
chooses to be submissive and endures her violence while on the other hand
Radical feminism is where a woman breaks the ideals of a patriarchal
society and liberates herself from the clutches of men. Beatrice has been
submissive from the very beginning of the novel. She puts up with her
husband’s tantrums very patiently but she is unable to digest her children,
particularly Kambili being tortured that she kills her husband and liberates
34
herself and her children. Adichie gives hope to the Nigerian women
through Beatrice although her female character has negatively retorted to
Eugene’s violence, Adichie deliberately portrays Beatrice’s patience and
submission which slowly transmogrifies her into a murderess thus she
wants to break the stereotyping of African female. Eugene on the other
hand is a victim of colonization who becomes a religious fanatic as he
patronizes Christianity introduced by the Europeans. He expects his family
to follow Catholicism rigidly which causes conflict inside the house. The
problem with Eugene is that he fails to imbibe the catholic teachings
instead gives importance to the rituals. His blind faith leads him to punish
his family in the cruellest way. Kambili and Beatrice being female are
silenced by the patriarchal society and are unable to retaliate. In contrast
Eugene who punishes Jaja as a child mellows in inflicting punishment on
Jaja as he reaches his teens. Jaja begins to retaliate by disobeying his father
and he escapes his punishments as he is a male. Eugene is angered by his
behaviour yet he fails to inflict punishment on him as he is his heir. Aunty
Ifeoma’s character is intentionally introduced by Adichie in the novel as a
foil to Beatrice. Aunty Ifeoma, a widow and Eugene’s sister, is a strong,
independent and outspoken woman unlike Beatrice who is soft, scared and
dependent on Eugene. Ifeoma is a self- reliant woman who struggles a lot
in the society as she is a female. She is threatened and falsely accused of
stealing question papers in the university and is demanded to submit her
resignation. She is even charged of killing her own husband by her
neighbours yet she battles out with life to rise above these conflicts. The
societal norms are that a son must take care of his father. In the novel
Adichie once again breaks this tradition where Ifeoma the daughter takes
care of the father, buys medicines and takes care of him when he is sick and
even conducts his funeral. Eugene fails as a son as he shirks his filial duties
to his father.
The novel Half of a Yellow Sun (2006) accentuates the role of
gender amidst the Nigerian Civil War where women take up the family
responsibility as the men are either fighting in the war or have become
disoriented. The female behaviour shows an enormous level of fluidity
throughout Adichie’s narrative that portrays reality. Thus, Adichie
illustrates her female characters Olanna, Kainene and the minor characters
Mrs. Mokelu, Mama Oji, Adana, Aunty Ifeka who struggle during the war
and also hold the family together independently. They stand in long queues
to collect food from the relief centres and also at the hospitals to meet the
doctors. They witness the children dying from kwashiorkor disease,
starvation and shelling. Adichie has constructed her female characters by
attributing male qualities and thus breaks the stereotyping of female
characters.
Men also suffer during the war and lose their body parts and are
even killed in action but the female characters suffer doubly as they are
raped, assaulted by the enemies, vandals and their own Biafran soldiers.
The character Ugwu a naïve village boy who stays in Odenigbo’s house is
kidnapped by the soldiers to serve in the war. Ugwu is scared and without
prior training he is installed in the war. He is also sexually harassed by the
fellow soldiers. Adichie portrays her male protagonist fragile and
vulnerable which is visible when Odenigbo drifts away from the family due
the effect of the war on him. He consumes alcohol and loses interest in
35
family affairs. He does not care much when Baby falls sick and lacks
interest in sex and does not exhibit concern when the family runs low on
money. Richard, the white journalist, is very scared of Kainene as he feels
that he might disappoint her in bed. Adichie boldly casts her male
characters at the vulnerable end and thus dismantles gender stereotyping.
Adichie goes to the extent of punishing men when at fault which is evident
when Olanna counter attacks her lover by sleeping with Richard who is
Kainene’s boyfriend. Olanna gets her revenge as she is bitterly betrayed by
her husband who impregnates Amala the household girl. Adichie wants her
male characters to understand that sleeping with any woman cannot be
justified anymore through the character of Olanna.
Unlike African women who are submissive and silenced Olanna
has her revenge on Odenigbo so as to make him feel the sting of betrayal.
Her clogged mind becomes free as she is happy that she had avenged
Odenigbo which had kept her mind nagging. She further informs Odenigbo
on purpose about the night she spent with Richard which infuriates him.
Olanna feels satisfied as she has made him feel the pain that she felt when
she heard that he had slept with Amala. Olanna puts Odenigbo in a similar
condition that he had created for her to make men understand that women
can behave similarly. Sleeping with several women does not affect men in a
patriarchal society but a female who sleeps with more than one man is
termed as a prostitute.
The society has assigned certain roles for men and women in the
world, but in this novel Adichie breaks the society standards by treating
both men and women equally. Both her female characters are well educated
and have completed their higher studies abroad. Olanna who is treated by
her father as a sex bait in order to gain orders in business, defies her
father’s will. Born in an elite family, she still prefers to teach and goes to
work at Nsukka university and stays with her revolutionary lover and leads
a middle-class life.
In Americanah (2013) the author exhibits the miseries of the
immigrants through Ifemelu and Obinze who travel to America and the
United Kingdom respectively. Adichie shows the degree of racial hatred
that prevailed outside Nigeria through Ifemelu who faces insults and
undergoes identity crisis. Ifemelu’s stay in America faces hatred from the
Americans and the African -Americans. She is unlike the Americans as she
is fat, dark and her hair bushy or most times in cornrows. She finds herself
tangled in a foreign culture slowly losing her identity and she feels
suffocated living with her two boyfriends Curt and Blaine which makes her
yearn more for Obinze her high school fiancé. America has never been
cordial in any way to her that she longs to go back to Nigeria. She starts a
blog exclusively for Africans which reassured their confidence as blacks.
Her blog gains a massive response from the other Africans residing in
America who voice out their grievances and dissatisfaction in America.
Through the blog, Adichie is able to give an honest account of the feelings
of the many Africans that have settled in America and furthermore speaks
for the Africans who have lost their identity while staying in America.
Ifemelu’s aunt Uju suffers in America as her job as a psychiatrist does not
pay enough for her to make both ends meet. This is because most
Americans avoid consulting her due to her colour. She becomes friendly
with an African- American who is keener on pulling out her money from
36
her. Aunty Uju who goes to America with a dream of surviving becomes
dejected by the hostility of the whites towards her. She is barely able to
take care of her son Dike who does not remember his childhood in Nigeria.
Dike who grows up in a hostile environment makes him go into depression.
The incident where he is denied a sunscreen lotion as his classmates think it
is not necessary for his skin affects him so much that he attempts suicide.
Ifemelu is able to understand her cousin better than his mother as she
knows the struggle that he is facing in America as a black. Uju fails to
recognize his problem as she herself is busy trying to survive in a foreign
land. Obinze on the other hand suffers in England where he is insulted by
his own people. His job is to clean toilets which he accepts and does not
cringe about his job although he is not satisfied and yearns to go back to
Nigeria.
Chapter IV is Mutation: An Analysis of Religion and Culture in
Nigeria in the Select Novels of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie focuses on the
conflicts that emerged due to the collapse in religious and cultural beliefs
enabled by colonialism. The Europeans left the country in a state of chaos
as the introduction of Christianity hindered the county’s native belief and
culture. They made the natives feel inferior and also made them believe that
they were all pagans. They converted them into Christianity and erected
churches in Nigeria and even paved way for mushrooming of numerous
Christian sects. Adichie through her character Kambili brings out the
religious and cultural conflicts that erupt due to Catholicism practiced in
her house. Kambili through her narration elucidates the plight of the
Nigerians who got confused and rejected their own kith and kin for
following their native religion. The colonizers tricked them as the Kenyan
leader Jomo Kenyatta states that “when the missionaries arrived, the
Africans had the land and the missionaries had the Bible. They taught us to
pray with our eyes closed. When we opened them, they had the land and we
had the Bible.” Kambili observes the colonial impact in her house where
her father is a Catholic Religious fanatic who shows greater interest in the
rituals rather than the teachings. He despises the native Igbos who follow
native the religion and considers them as pagans which also includes his
own biological father. He disowns his father and refuses to visit him and
also objects to his children visiting their grandfather. He prays very hard
and forces his family also to do so and when they fail to follow his rules, he
penalizes them violently, which is similar to the colonial rulers who
inflicted harsh punishments on the people.
The novel takes place two decades after the Civil War and the
impact of colonialism has not changed. Adichie sketches Aunty Ifeoma’s
character which is unlike her brother Eugene as she is much more liberal in
her thoughts and actions. She is concerned over her father’s health and
takes care of him devotedly since her brother neglects him. She teaches
Kambili that Papa Nnukw is not a pagan but a traditional Nigerian and
needs to be respected. Aunty Ifeoma is also educated by the Christian
missionaries yet has a balanced head and also respects the Nigerian
traditional beliefs through which Adichie celebrates Nigeria’s tradition and
culture. She gives importance to Masquerades, folklores, Dibia/ Medicine
man, Ukwu Art, bride price, animal sacrifice, Kola nut and palm wine. This
is also represented in the novel Half of a Yellow Sun by Adichie who
illustrates the importance of art through her character Richard whom she
37
stern and rigid in his actions and yet runs to his family whenever he
encounters a problem. He shares his worries and troubles with his wife and
at times with his children that makes him an exceptional character. Kambili
recalls the ‘love sip’ which she and her brother are asked to take from her
father Eugene’s cup which makes Kambili feel proud of her father although
the boiling tea burns her tongue. Every time Eugene cries after hurting his
family members makes the readers feel sad and earns admiration for him.
Richard apologizes to Kainene that he is unable to satisfy her in bed which
is very rarely accepted by men. Similarly, Odenigbo becomes helpless
when he learns Amala is pregnant and seeks Olanna’s help although he
knows he has committed a mistake. Ugwu who is forced by his fellow
soldiers to prove his masculinity at the bar, rapes the bar girl which is a
short-lived experience but feels ashamed of being mean to the girl and
regrets for the rest of his life. Adichie reiterates that men who seek for help
are not fragile but are in a path to resolve a conflict. These conflicts are
faced in any normal household where a man and woman fight but in
Nigeria these conflicts are created due to the colonial residue which has
ingrained unsolicited conflicts. In Purple Hibiscus religion basically
contributes to the family’s destruction, in Half of a Yellow Sun the problem
occurs due to the war and cultural transformations similarly in Americanah
it is the cultural transformation and racism which contributes to domestic
conflicts.
By examining Adichie’s select novels, it can be concluded that
Nigeria’s conflict has never ceased since the day Nigeria gained its
independence. The author aims at exploring these conflicts which is
primarily initiated by the Europeans who left the land chaotic and turbulent
and have been the main cause for the numerous types of ongoing multi-
dimensional conflicts in Nigeria. In Adichie’s TED talks ‘The Danger of a
Single Story’ she claims that many stories matter. Stories have been used to
dispossess and to malign. But stories can also be used to empower, and to
humanize. Stories can break the dignity of a people. But stories can also
repair that broken dignity. The present study exhibits the various sides of
the different types of the ongoing conflicts that is faced by the Nigerians as
elucidated in Adichie’s writings. These multiple ongoing obstinate conflicts
in Nigeria seems to have no end as the conflicts are interlocked and its
causes are deeply rooted in colonization which has altered Nigeria’s pattern
of living. Colonization and its features like struggle for power, position,
domination, nepotism, resources, land disputes, exploitation, oppression,
marginalization, social class status and inequality have become the order of
the day and is all merged in Adichie’s novels which express her concern for
her homeland. Through her characters and narration, she throws light on
Nigeria, a land which is actually rich in resources has been pushed to the
periphery due to the ongoing conflicts and its violence born due to
colonialism. Osaghae and Suberu writes
Nigeria is synonymous with deep divisions which cause
major political issues to be vigorously and violently
contested along the lines of intricate ethnic, religious and
regional divisions. Issues that raise the most dust are those
regarded essential for the existence and the validity of the
state. (Ethnic and Religious Crises in Nigeria 2005:4).
39
negotiate two languages and sometimes three, if you include Pidgin. For the
Igbo in particular, ours is the Engli-Igbo generation and so to somehow
claim that Igbo alone can capture our experience is to limit it.”
The novel Purple Hibiscus is written in first person point of view
of a 15-year-old teenager Kambili. The novel is divided into three parts viz
“Breaking Gods – Palm Sunday” Speaking with Our Spirits – Before Palm
Sunday” and “The Pieces of God – After Palm Sunday”. Adichie
intentionally employs a day that is considered to be Holy to the Catholics
and juxtaposes Breaking Gods to indicate the transformations that take
place in Achike’s house and moves on to demonstrate Papa Eugene’s
religious fanaticism. The second part focuses on the Christmas celebrations
that take place in Abba and Kambili meets her cousins at Abba for the first
time. Papa Eugene and his father Papa Nnukwu’s conflict is elucidated in
the second section. Later they visit their cousins at Nsukka and Kambili
falls in love with Father Amadi. The second part throws light on the culture
and religion of the Igbos. The third section unravels the family being
destroyed by Eugene’s religious extremism and his harsh punishments
which incurs the wrath of his wife who poisons him.
The novel Purple Hibiscus begins with the Achebe’s famous novel
title Things Fall Apart which expresses the destruction brought about by
the colonizers. Adichie employs Achebe’s title to suit the trends in Nigeria
in the late 1990s which have not undergone any changes and yet remain
similar to the colonial era “Thing started to fall apart at home when my
brother Jaja did not go to communion and Papa flung his heavy missal
across the room and broke the figurines on the etagère” (1).
Adichie in an interview to Bookslut re-counts her writing style in
Half of a Yellow Sun
One thing I did right from the beginning was to have a
structure where I start in the beginning, then move to the
war when terrible things start to happen, and then to move
back to the beginning. It’s important for me as well because
I didn’t want to lose the humanity in my characters. I didn’t
want to be immersed in this place where all I felt for them
was pity or horror. (Bookslut)
Adichie switches to Igbo lexical on and off in her writings with
great ease that makes it interesting for the readers to read. Her artistic
interplay of form in her novel aids into comprehending her Engli-Ibo
writing.
“O me mma, Chineke, o me mma …” Mama started her
song and then stopped when I greeted her. (PH 39)
“Mom, biko, give me the neck,” Amaka said. (PH 120)
“Mom, o zugo. Let’s go,” Amaka said. (PH 129)
Aunty Ifeoma was watching us. “Amaka, ngwa, show
Kambili how to peel it.” (Adichie PH 134)
“Why do you look that way, o gini?” she asked. (PH 165)
“O nkem. It’s mine,” Jaja said. He wrapped the painting
around his chest with his arms. (Adichie PH 210)
Kedu? I will be here all night. Sleep. Rest,” Mama said. She
got up and sat on my bed. (PH 214)
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Similarly, she straightens her hair with relaxers which leaves her
hair damaged and is ashamed of her behaviour. Likewise, Obinze struggles
in England and his own black female colleague avoids him deliberately and
converses only to the white men as she is in the process of wanting to be
married to a white since she feels that the skin colour of her future baby
will tone down slightly. His friend considers it inappropriate in taking his
wife to Nigeria because he is ashamed of his own country. Obinze’s mother
is keen on making her son stay in England as she feels that he will have a
better life. He is therefore forced to fake marriage in order to stay in
England which causes trouble for him when his plans are discovered by the
immigration officer. He is immediately deported to Nigeria and on the
contrary Adichie shows Obinze becomes rich in Nigeria as he learns the
nuances of land business. This shows that even though Nigeria has its own
resources people yearn to settle abroad believing that they will have better
job opportunities.
Adichie introduces Richard a white journalist in Half of a Yellow
Sun who is asked to write a report of the Biafra war by Madu who knows
that when a white man writes about the war the world would listen. The
two American Journalists who visit Nigeria to record the event find nothing
interesting since according to them only when a white man dies it is news
but thousands of blacks being killed do not affect them. Richard wonders
about the White journalist’s attitude. They watch the children eat roasted
rats, but do not comprehend that it is because of the war. They ask for ‘real
Biafrans’ to give them news of the war. Richard who gets a first-hand
experience of the war is astonished of the journalist’s attitude towards the
war.
All these conflicts are ongoing conflicts in Nigeria and Adichie in
her speech speaks about the various current issues and conflicts in Nigeria.
Adichie recalls that both her grandfathers died in the Nigerian Civil War
refugee camp. Her father James Nwoye Adichie was kidnapped in Abba,
Nsukka in 2015 and he was agitated by the entire incident. The reason
behind him being kidnapped is that he is the father of the renowned
Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Adichie expresses her grief in
many interviews as the incident left her in shock as she states in an
interview with BBC News Hours, “We are still reeling from it. We still
have nightmares. I felt deeply hurt and shocked. I also felt very angry”. She
also blamed the authorities for their carelessness as they did not show any
interest in saving her father.
Her statement to the Daily Post titled ‘Nigeria Failed Us’ exhibits
the extent of hatred that prevailed in the country and Adichie reeling from
the nightmare says that her father James Nwoye Adichie is an erudite
scholar and has contributed in large to Nigeria’s education and is greatly
disappointed by Nigerian governments response to her father’s kidnapping
made her wonder at the plight of Nigeria which still remains unchanged.
She further added that her father was always cautious about her daughter
and kept telling them that he does not even have her number. After the
incident her father feared staying in Nigeria and hence her parents moved
to America.
Conflicts abound in Nigeria which occurs as a result of endless pain
and sufferings that exist in Nigeria. The 2020 End SARS Now had killed
several civilians in Nigeria and is criticized by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
45