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FEMALE CHAUVINISTS AND MALE PATRIARCHS: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF GENDER RELATIONS IN AMA ATA AIDOO’S CHANGES: A LOVE STORY

FEMALE CHAUVINISTS AND MALE PATRIARCHS: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF GENDER RELATIONS IN AMA ATA AIDOO’S CHANGES: A LOVE STORY

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dc.contributor.author Benon Tugume
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 20789785
dc.identifier.issn 26636565
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48983
dc.description.abstract This article examines gender relations in Ama Ata Aidoo’s Changes: A Love Story (henceforth Changes).  The novel depicts a gender crisis among the educated and career-oriented women working in government offices in Accra. The focus is on women’s education, sexuality, marriage, and marital rape. The three women protagonists, Esi, Opokuya and Fusena, find the institution of marriage challenging and hold the view that it hampers their career development. Esi is highly educated compared to the other female characters. She is a female chauvinist, who feels too powerful to be controlled by a man. She finds herself in the most complicated situation in her marriage, because of her feminist views, which she acquired from Western education. Although she abhors the dominance of men over women, her sexuality naturally brings her into relationships with male patriarchs. Her views about love and marriage are superficial and irreconcilable with the realities of her society. She divorces her first husband because of marital rape and goes into a polygamous marriage, which she also finds unfulfilling. In this article, I argue that Esi’s problems in her first marriage are due to her uncompromising character and her inability to engage her husband in order to strike a balance between family obligations and career goals. In addition, I argue that Esi does not realise her expectations in the second marriage because she emotionally and selfishly goes into it without understanding the rules that govern polygamous marriages.
dc.publisher UNISA Press
dc.relation.ispartof Imbizo
dc.title FEMALE CHAUVINISTS AND MALE PATRIARCHS: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF GENDER RELATIONS IN AMA ATA AIDOO’S CHANGES: A LOVE STORY
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.25159/2078-9785/1928
dc.identifier.mag 2605234777
dc.identifier.lens 010-553-407-978-493
dc.identifier.volume 7
dc.identifier.issue 1
dc.identifier.spage 91
dc.identifier.epage 100
dc.subject.lens-fields Gender studies
dc.subject.lens-fields Government
dc.subject.lens-fields Psychology
dc.subject.lens-fields Career development
dc.subject.lens-fields Marital rape
dc.subject.lens-fields Polygamous marriage
dc.subject.lens-fields Love story
dc.subject.lens-fields Western education
dc.subject.lens-fields Gender relations
dc.subject.lens-fields Human sexuality


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