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To browse Academia. Miliann Kang. Linda Kwatsha. This article focuses on gender inequalities in selected African literary texts. I explore the way in which some African writers view gender inequalities and stereotypes in their characters.
We will also be able to see who is involved and affected by these gender inequalities and how. Gender theory will be used as a framework. The aspects of gender that are discussed, include gender stereotypes, gender roles, gender identity, the superiority of men, inequality in polygamous marriages, sex roles, the sexual division of labour and arranged marriage. This study will also include the views of writers from other part of Africa. These views have a lot in common but sometimes they vary because of the influence and different ideologies of the society concerned.
Chantal Zabus. Muhammad Alkali. Its contributions are felt in the social sciences, natural sciences, the humanities, as well as literary criticism. Despite the contributions made by various disciplines and cultures, the Igbo literary studies that exist and those of other languages cited in this study seemed not to have ascertained what linguistic features that accounted for the differences in communicating gender identities and roles.
This gap created by the existing studies has necessitated this study. Nwaozuzu β to investigate the problem. The data analysis predicated on the assumptions that the milieu of study texts is patriarchal and that language expresses reality.
The analysis applied the principles of markedness and unmarkedness on the schemes of metaphor, euphemism and transitivity choice to delineate noun and pronoun referents of characters in study texts. Findings reveal that referents used for male characters exhibited ummarkedness through the use of indefinite nouns and pronouns, while those of the female characters exhibited markedness through the use of definite nouns and pronouns.