Arts, Media and Popular Culture
Invoking Memories of Legendary African Women: a Reading of Rocha Chimera's Trilogy Siri Sirini
This article examines how legendary representations enable reinterpretation of the histories of women in Africa. It shows that ascribing heroic and revolutionary qualities to remembered African women seeks to significantly transform societal gender perceptions of women as victims of history. Through a critical reading of Rocha Chimera's trilogy Siri Sirini (2013), i attempt to show that legendary representations transcend victim-hood by envisioning women as capable of confronting injustices in a quest to establish a new order where human dignity for all can be realized. I also indicate that the power of interpretation of histories enshrined in literary texts is vital because this power usually embodies particular political investments with, in the case, regard to gender relations.
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