Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru

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Format: Restricted Document
_version_ 1860797371419459584
building INTELEK Repository
collection Online Access
collectionurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072
date 2019-05-26 15:56:03
format Restricted Document
id 12449
institution UniSZA
originalfilename 6752-01-FH02-FBK-20-47701.pdf
person Mohd Nazri Latiff Azmi
Isyaku Hassan
Mubarak Ibrahim Lawan & Habibu Awais Abubakar
recordtype oai_dc
resourceurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=12449
spelling 12449 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=12449 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072 Restricted Document Article Journal application/pdf 12 Adobe Acrobat Pro DC 20 Paper Capture Plug-in 1.7 Mohd Nazri Latiff Azmi Isyaku Hassan Mubarak Ibrahim Lawan & Habibu Awais Abubakar 2019-05-26 15:56:03 Attahiru drama Nigeria postcolonial resistance Sokoto Caliphate 6752-01-FH02-FBK-20-47701.pdf UniSZA Private Access Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru Arab World English Journal for Translation & Literary Studies The relationship between history proper and African historical plays drew much attention of researchers in recent years. Many theatre scholars and playwrights argue that the value of these plays, which were primarily regarded as fiction or imaginative reconstruction of the past, may prevail over history. Theatre, which is considered the most symbolic form of art, can be historically educative and evocatively accurate. Based on the aforesaid arguments, this study aims to explore the dramaturgicals, theatricals or thespians used in Yerima's Attahiru (1999) in order to repudiate and resist the distorted versions of the colonial history of Sokoto Caliphate in an effective and affective way. To achieve this aim, textual analysis is used by combining its important approaches: author-oriented approach and context-oriented approach. This analysis is significant because the researchers investigated the colonial resistance captured in the play through postcolonial theory. In addition, this paper explores the attitudes of the colonialist and the colonised reproduced in the play and how the play helps in the decolonisation process, as well as how the images of the damaged heroes are reconstructed in the play in order to restore national pride and integrity. The play reconstructs and corrects a seriously damaged and awfully misrepresented African spiritual leader, Caliph Attahiru of the old Sokoto Caliphate in Northern Nigeria. 3 2 165-176
spellingShingle Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
summary The relationship between history proper and African historical plays drew much attention of researchers in recent years. Many theatre scholars and playwrights argue that the value of these plays, which were primarily regarded as fiction or imaginative reconstruction of the past, may prevail over history. Theatre, which is considered the most symbolic form of art, can be historically educative and evocatively accurate. Based on the aforesaid arguments, this study aims to explore the dramaturgicals, theatricals or thespians used in Yerima's Attahiru (1999) in order to repudiate and resist the distorted versions of the colonial history of Sokoto Caliphate in an effective and affective way. To achieve this aim, textual analysis is used by combining its important approaches: author-oriented approach and context-oriented approach. This analysis is significant because the researchers investigated the colonial resistance captured in the play through postcolonial theory. In addition, this paper explores the attitudes of the colonialist and the colonised reproduced in the play and how the play helps in the decolonisation process, as well as how the images of the damaged heroes are reconstructed in the play in order to restore national pride and integrity. The play reconstructs and corrects a seriously damaged and awfully misrepresented African spiritual leader, Caliph Attahiru of the old Sokoto Caliphate in Northern Nigeria.
title Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
title_full Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
title_fullStr Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
title_full_unstemmed Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
title_short Drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in Northern Nigeria: A review of Ahmed Yerima’s Attahiru
title_sort drama, history, and postcolonial résistance in northern nigeria: a review of ahmed yerima’s attahiru