Women, especially in northern Nigeria have become the silenced “subalterns” due to misconceptions about the Islamic religion especially on issues of polygamy, domestic violence, segregation, exploitation, dehumanization and various types of abuses meted on them. This paper seeks to examine how female characters are depicted in Razinat T. Mohammed’s A Love like a Woman’s and Other Stories and the various mechanisms that have situated them into the position of the silenced subalterns. Anchoring on Gayatri Spivak’s “Can the Subaltern Speak” the paper argues that women in A Love like a Woman’s and Other Stories are doubly marginalized and are constantly silenced by men due to the northern tradition and the misinterpretation of the Islamic relig...
This paper aims at spotlighting the process of dehumanization women are victim of in many African tr...
Traditional views on women in relation to men in almost all aspects of life have always been in favo...
Over the years, Nigeria has gained the unpopular recognition globally as a patriarchal society in wh...
Privately Empowered responds to the lack of adequate attention paid to Islam in Africa in comparison...
This study explores the concepts of language, gender/power relations, social and discriminatory regi...
grantor: University of TorontoIn this study, we undertake a socio-cultural analysis of fem...
The study explores the syndrome of domestic subjugation closely through a progression of already est...
Hausa1 women have been either a major subject of discussion or at the receiving end of religious act...
Female fictional writers in Nigeria have won critical acclaim in women struggle. Efforts by some wri...
‘The Silence of Muhammad’ is a novel written by Salim BACHI, published in 2008, it is a fictionalize...
This research examines a novel entitled A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum that depicts two Palestinian M...
For more than a century since British colonization of Nigeria (1914-1960), the voices of Nigerian wo...
The research probes the anguish of Muslim women through the character Zarri Bano from “The Holy Woma...
This paper aims to shed light on the miserableness, ill-being, and sufferings of the Arab women in t...
In this present modern society, it is noted that women writers world over, use their works to expose...
This paper aims at spotlighting the process of dehumanization women are victim of in many African tr...
Traditional views on women in relation to men in almost all aspects of life have always been in favo...
Over the years, Nigeria has gained the unpopular recognition globally as a patriarchal society in wh...
Privately Empowered responds to the lack of adequate attention paid to Islam in Africa in comparison...
This study explores the concepts of language, gender/power relations, social and discriminatory regi...
grantor: University of TorontoIn this study, we undertake a socio-cultural analysis of fem...
The study explores the syndrome of domestic subjugation closely through a progression of already est...
Hausa1 women have been either a major subject of discussion or at the receiving end of religious act...
Female fictional writers in Nigeria have won critical acclaim in women struggle. Efforts by some wri...
‘The Silence of Muhammad’ is a novel written by Salim BACHI, published in 2008, it is a fictionalize...
This research examines a novel entitled A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum that depicts two Palestinian M...
For more than a century since British colonization of Nigeria (1914-1960), the voices of Nigerian wo...
The research probes the anguish of Muslim women through the character Zarri Bano from “The Holy Woma...
This paper aims to shed light on the miserableness, ill-being, and sufferings of the Arab women in t...
In this present modern society, it is noted that women writers world over, use their works to expose...
This paper aims at spotlighting the process of dehumanization women are victim of in many African tr...
Traditional views on women in relation to men in almost all aspects of life have always been in favo...
Over the years, Nigeria has gained the unpopular recognition globally as a patriarchal society in wh...