Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/4598
Title: In defense of African male writers’ feminist philosophy: Alternative reading of Sembene Ousmane—“The Feminist Macho”
Authors: Shigali, Hellen Roselyne L.
Keywords: Feminism
Gender,
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: David Publishing
Abstract: Gender sensitivity and feminist perspective in fiction is stereotypically associated with female writers based on stereotypical dichotomies that define patriarchy categorizing humanity into aggressive male oppressor versus passive female oppressor. The concepts are relatively new in African developmental discourse and scholarship. Gender is gradually gaining acceptance but feminism remains a dirty word in general public perception. It is replete with misconceptions and controversies. It is associated with the female rebel who is anti-African culture. In this context, African culture is presumed to be ideal and static. Its sexist practices against both men and women are erroneously misrepresented as African traditional values. Attempts to challenge the status quo in any sphere of life are attributed to disruptive foreign influence, on the assumption that all African peoples cherish their variants of patriarchy. Existence of indigenous egalitarian worldview and emancipatory ideologies is silenced. This scenario extends into African literature and criticism, so much so that many female writers disclaim the term because to acclaim it is to subject oneself to curious scrutiny. Therefore, to attach the label to an African, male writer requires justification. Fortunately, the label “feminist macho” was constructed by Sembene Ousmane’s friend and authorized biographer Samba Gadjigo who probably has a deeper understanding of the concept particularly in reference to Ousmane’s novel God’s Bits of Wood (1960). However, it is essential to clarify that African feminism exemplified by the text is not synonymous with Western feminisms that emerge from a capitalist, individualist, and seemingly secular worldview. Analysis of Ousmane’s vision on gender issues in this paper is guided by African feminist social theories formulated by Nigerian poet and critic, Molara Ogundipe-Leslie and Siera Leonian, as well as an anthropologist Filomina Chioma Steady. To constitute a framework for literary analysis, tenets of the social theories are combined with literary stylistics. Reference is made to scholars in the Diaspora who espouse Afrocentric feminist worldview and other African male writers who exhibit gender sensitivity. The underpining philosophy of African gender sensitivity views male and female as two complementary parts of a whole defined as human. This is an unchanging truth that makes scientific sense considering that all humans originate from an intricate combination of male and female seed in procreation. The concept of otherness is a latter day invention. By inference, when one part of the human whole presumes dominance against the other, it shares the resultant ramifications. Secondly, humans are social beings, which implies whatever every individual does requires an audience or accomplice. This presupposition unsettles the dichotomous paradigm that defines human relations particularly gender relations.
URI: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/4598
Appears in Collections:School of Arts and Social Sciences

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