INTERROGATING PARENTS’ INVOLVEMENT IN CHILDREN’S MARRIAGE IN AFRICA IN SELECTED WORKS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF FICTION AND REALITY
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Abstract
This paper focuses on redressing the critical imbalance that underestimates
parents’ involvement in traditional marriage in Africa. Marriage in this
context is defined as the union between a man and a woman. Indeed, most
of those who criticize parents’ involvement in their children’s marriage do
it based on their ignorance of African realities. Others do it because they
just want African ways to look Western. The works under study are Chinua
Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and No Longer at Ease, inspired by the Ibo
culture and custom, and Olagoke Ariwoola’s The African Wife and Jomo
Kenyatta’s Facing Mount Kenya. The last two are not novels but civilization
books. The former is set in Nigeria and deals with the Yoruba culture and
custom, while the latter is set in Kenya and deals with the Kikuyu culture
and custom. The two books make it possible not only to compare the
message in the novels with the realities through the books but also the
Eastern African realities, precisely the Kikuyu, in terms of marriage with
the ones of Western Africa mainly those of Yoruba and Ibo. The study
reveals that parents’ involvement in children’s marriage is not synonymous
with imposing wives to one’s sons or husbands to one’s daughters but just a
necessary coaching which is advantageous to both the family being founded
and the extended families of both sides. It also points out some weaknesses
in this practice. For efficient analysis, I have used socio-criticism,
womanism, feminism, and postcolonialism as literary theories and the
qualitative approach method.
