Guardat en:
| Autor principal: | |
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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Idioma: | anglès |
| Publicat: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Matèries: | |
| Accés en línia: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18501093 |
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Taula de continguts:
- <p>This study offers a feminist re-reading of Christopher Okigbo’s poetry by interrogating the gendered symbolic structures that underpin his modernist and nationalist poetics. While Okigbo is frequently celebrated for his mythopoesis, aesthetic autonomy and sacrificial nationalism, this study argues that such readings obscure the patriarchal logic through which his poetic authority is constituted. Through close readings of five poems selected from Heavensgate (1962), Distances (1964), Silences (1965) and Labyrinths with Path of Thunder (1971), the study examines how femininity and masculinity are not pre-given identities but discursive effects produced by the poems. Drawing on African feminist theory and postcolonial criticism, the analysis demonstrates how Okigbo’s poetry sacralises female figures as ancestral, maternal and mythic, while simultaneously denying them speech, historical agency and political subjectivity. Masculinity, by contrast, signifies prophetic voice, martyrdom and historical intervention, positioning the male poet-figure as the legitimate mediator between myth and nation. The study further argues that sacrifice in Okigbo’s poetry is gendered not merely symbolically but structurally: women signify continuity and origin, while men are authorised to die, speak and act for the nation. By foregrounding these asymmetries, the study challenges dominant interpretations that treat Okigbo’s modernism as universal, transcendental or gender-neutral, and instead, situates his poetry within a masculinist nationalist tradition whose aesthetic power is inseparable from its exclusions. This intervention repositions Okigbo as a central but contested figure in African modernism whose poetic achievement is bound to the gendered limits of nationalist imagination.</p>