Everything Good will Come presents the trope of the absent mother which scholars have identified as a significant feature of third generation Nigerian women prose fiction writings. Besides the trope of the absent mother, religion and identity also feature prominently in Atta’s Everything Good will Come. This article harmonises these three dominant motifs in the narrative towards an examination of the complexity of identity formation in Everything Good will Come. The article focuses on Mike’s sculptures as an artistic depiction of the dynamics that ultimately influence Enitan’s identity formation. Due to the plurality of religious ideologies in the postcolonial Nigeria depicted in the narrative, the motifs of Christianity and traditional rel...
The issue of motherhood in African women’s writings has transcended the façade of binary oppositions...
Third‐generation Nigerian female writers’ representation of gender in local spaces through the rethi...
For more than a century since British colonization of Nigeria (1914-1960), the voices of Nigerian wo...
Everything good will come presents the trope of the absent mother which scholars have identified as ...
Sefi Atta’s debut novel Everything Good Will Come (2006) examines the growing up of a child from ado...
Sefi Atta as one of Nigerian famous writers has made an honorable literary work entitled Everything ...
The link between gender and creativity has often been emphasised in scholarly appraisals of women wr...
While studies on the patriarchal order and the marginalization of women in male-authored African nov...
Gendered identity in Africa has for centuries been a hotbed of ideological and narrative contestatio...
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, born in India in 1956, is a prominent diasporic writer and a poet. Her w...
This thesis project examines the work of three female Nigerian authors: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Se...
This thesis analyses the work of three contemporary Nigerian writers, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Hal...
Buchi Emecheta is one of the most important female writers to emerge from Nigeria. She is distinguis...
The feminine image, as a gendered discourse, requires attention to ethical and gender details so tha...
This paper focuses on Buchi Emecheta’s depiction of the female character in her novel, The Joys of M...
The issue of motherhood in African women’s writings has transcended the façade of binary oppositions...
Third‐generation Nigerian female writers’ representation of gender in local spaces through the rethi...
For more than a century since British colonization of Nigeria (1914-1960), the voices of Nigerian wo...
Everything good will come presents the trope of the absent mother which scholars have identified as ...
Sefi Atta’s debut novel Everything Good Will Come (2006) examines the growing up of a child from ado...
Sefi Atta as one of Nigerian famous writers has made an honorable literary work entitled Everything ...
The link between gender and creativity has often been emphasised in scholarly appraisals of women wr...
While studies on the patriarchal order and the marginalization of women in male-authored African nov...
Gendered identity in Africa has for centuries been a hotbed of ideological and narrative contestatio...
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, born in India in 1956, is a prominent diasporic writer and a poet. Her w...
This thesis project examines the work of three female Nigerian authors: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Se...
This thesis analyses the work of three contemporary Nigerian writers, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Hal...
Buchi Emecheta is one of the most important female writers to emerge from Nigeria. She is distinguis...
The feminine image, as a gendered discourse, requires attention to ethical and gender details so tha...
This paper focuses on Buchi Emecheta’s depiction of the female character in her novel, The Joys of M...
The issue of motherhood in African women’s writings has transcended the façade of binary oppositions...
Third‐generation Nigerian female writers’ representation of gender in local spaces through the rethi...
For more than a century since British colonization of Nigeria (1914-1960), the voices of Nigerian wo...