This essay examines the circumstances of Jubril, Chief Ukongo and Colonel Usenetok, three casualties of Sharia war fleeing to safety in Uwem Akpan’s short story, “Luxurious Hearses” in her collection, Say You’re One of Them (2008). The paper particularly identifies the loss of personhood that afflicts these individuals as a result of war; that loss of self that manifests itself in absurdity. Akpan paints poignant and convincing pictures of the horrors of war, of the physical and mental dislocation of individuals in a war situation. This paper finds that for those caught up in the throes of war or conflict, life has one basic meaning – physical survival
Nigeria has been challenged by all forms of anti-government revolts from groups such as the Niger De...
Wole Soyinka’s A Shuttle in the Crypt is a distillation of deep-seated anger against what he perceiv...
This paper forms part of a wider attempt at engaging the issues of nation-building, war, and trauma ...
Wars exhibit man’s inhumanity to man. This paper discusses war as a theme in a number of fictions an...
Eddie Iroh made the observation that writers of his generation, who had lived through the Biafran co...
Buchi Emecheta's Destination Biafra chronicles happenings of the Nigerian civil war. The criticism i...
In the Nigerian context, every mention of war (as a word in the Nigerian past or present) automatica...
This essay considers the impact of the 1967-1970 Biafran War on ordinary people's lives, through a c...
The paper establishes the prevalence of war traumas, related symptoms and prevention; and interventi...
This paper contends that there exists a paradoxical relationship between violence and conflictual si...
This article is concerned with the mnemonics of colonial violence and how Chimurenga War during Zimb...
The traumatic experiences of the Nigerian Civil War continue to resonate in the minds of literary wr...
Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThis study explores how selected West African war novels employ non-realist...
Abstract The intransigent nature of war in parts of Eastern Africa continues to be a grave concern t...
Half of a Yellow Sun, written by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, is a novel filled with notions of tragedy...
Nigeria has been challenged by all forms of anti-government revolts from groups such as the Niger De...
Wole Soyinka’s A Shuttle in the Crypt is a distillation of deep-seated anger against what he perceiv...
This paper forms part of a wider attempt at engaging the issues of nation-building, war, and trauma ...
Wars exhibit man’s inhumanity to man. This paper discusses war as a theme in a number of fictions an...
Eddie Iroh made the observation that writers of his generation, who had lived through the Biafran co...
Buchi Emecheta's Destination Biafra chronicles happenings of the Nigerian civil war. The criticism i...
In the Nigerian context, every mention of war (as a word in the Nigerian past or present) automatica...
This essay considers the impact of the 1967-1970 Biafran War on ordinary people's lives, through a c...
The paper establishes the prevalence of war traumas, related symptoms and prevention; and interventi...
This paper contends that there exists a paradoxical relationship between violence and conflictual si...
This article is concerned with the mnemonics of colonial violence and how Chimurenga War during Zimb...
The traumatic experiences of the Nigerian Civil War continue to resonate in the minds of literary wr...
Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThis study explores how selected West African war novels employ non-realist...
Abstract The intransigent nature of war in parts of Eastern Africa continues to be a grave concern t...
Half of a Yellow Sun, written by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, is a novel filled with notions of tragedy...
Nigeria has been challenged by all forms of anti-government revolts from groups such as the Niger De...
Wole Soyinka’s A Shuttle in the Crypt is a distillation of deep-seated anger against what he perceiv...
This paper forms part of a wider attempt at engaging the issues of nation-building, war, and trauma ...