Role Reversal and Women’s Violence against Men in Amma Darko’s The Housemaid
Abstract
Women’s domination over men is now noticeable in many parts of the world. Domination in the context
of marriage is mostly seen as the supremacy of men over women. Very often, women only are perceived
to be the victims of domestic violence and to undergo decisions made by men who are seen as the
decision makers, the family leaders, and the perpetrators of violence in marriages. Consequently, female
hegemony over men remains untold in many African societies. This role reversal is noticeable in Amma
Darko’s The Housemaid through husbands’ battery and maltreatment and the leadership of women.
Through the lenses of the reader-oriented theory, this paper investigated the method through which
Darko makes available the phenomenon of women’s supremacy over men. It also argued that with the
advent of women’s domination over men, mankind slowly and surely attempts an effective
deconstruction of the patriarchal status exclusively dedicated to men. Violence and decision making are
no longer the privilege of men as women are changing the role in a male-controlled society.
