Chinua Achebe / Buchi Emecheta
In Buchi Emecheta's book, The Joys of Motherhood, colonialism is already instituted and through the main character, Nnu Ego, we are able to see what post-colonialism looks like from a woman's perspective. The reader has the knowledge of hindsight and what colonialism did in Africa, the major impact of it, however, the story that Emecheta creates completely avoids anachronism. The characters in Emecheta's book only know what they know is going on in their society at that time; they don't seem to know what we know now about colonialism. Chinua Achebe's book, Things Fall Apart, on the other hand, tells the tale of life before colonialism and when the white man came to a Nigerian village and the events that ensued after and how life changed for Nigerians. We understand through reading Achebe's work that colonialism came into Nigerian culture in a slow but constant way, and the Nigerian culture would never be the same afterwards. The Joys of Motherhood picks up where Achebe left off and gives the reader insight into what took place before colonialism so firmly placed itself in the Igbo community.
In The Joys of Motherhood, we see the importance of gender in the Igbo society. In Nnu Ego's town, polygamy is the custom and the worth of a woman is completely related to her ability to have children, or not to have children. In fact, Nnu Ego's first marriage to Amatokwu fails because of her difficulty to conceive. The customs are definitely limiting in the Igbo culture and we see Nnu Ego struggling to fulfill...
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