SEMIOTICS OF MASCULINITY AND FEMININITY IN PATRILINEAL AND MATRILINEAL CONTEXTS: A STUDY OF JOHN MUNONYE’S OBI AND ASARE KONADU’S A WOMAN IN HER PRIME6
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Abstract
This paper identifies and contextually analyses about one hundred and thirty (130)
sayings and metaphorical utterances from two West African novels – John Munonye’s
Obi (1969) and Asare Konadu’s A Woman in her Prime (1969) to uncover genderdeterminants
and male-female tenor. After overviewing the conceptual and theoretical
background drawing on the gender-theory and semiotics, the study reveals that these
proverbs and metaphors encode so much on gender-variables that they help to deduce
the male-female interpersonality and the ideology that governs gender symbols and
relations in the novels. Indeed, form the contextual analysis of the symbols used for
strong and weak men, for strong and weak women and for the male and female partners
in a ‘union’, the study contends that gender is more spiritual and cultural than biological
and may have little to do with sex differences.
