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Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Anowa- Whose Fault?

Afri domiciliate Wowork force Writers Tragic Responsibility Anowa is the second, last, and most accomplished play written by Ghanaian playwright, poet, short- explanation writer, and novelist Ama Ata Aidoo. Anowa was first published in 1970 and had its British premier in London in 1991 (E n wizs, 2013). It tells the story of a young African woman named Anowa. She is not ilk all of the different traditional wo hands in the t knowledge. Anowa likes to make her own choices and lives by her own opinions. The elders call her stubborn, she wont tie any of the sturdy men in the town, she laughs at her own jokes, att give the sack to her own tales, and follows her own advice (67).They all believe her vision is clouded. Her mother, Badua, wishes to ingest her marry a man and her father could dole out less what she does. She ends up meeting a man, Kofi, in the village and spills in hit the hay with him. She irrationally runs off with him and marries him. She completely disowns her fa mily and begins a life with Kofi. Over time, they fall away from each other do to communication provides and fetidness issues. due to the massive pain and heartache from the government agency, Kofi and Anowa both kill each other in the end. There is debate within the text about who was at break for the tragic ending.Many say that Anowa was the sole reason for their suicides. Although everyone in the high society is at fault. Anowas parents, Anowa, Kofi, and the traditional society are at fault. Badua has flub Anowa for most of her life. She has allowed her young lady to act and imply as she wishes. Badua states, how can she serve to any hot when everyone is always gossiping about her? (70). The mother is at fault for allowing her child to let her mind run free as a child and into her adolescence. She cherished her daughter to bedevil control and whence when she had it and chose to be with Kofi, her mother became very controlling and angry.As Badua complains to Osam, A nowas father, about her daughter not finding a husband, Osam writes her complaining off by look that his only duty was to create children (71). Osam goes on to explain that he wanted her to become a priestess. Badua would not listen to him. She covered her ears and explained that priestess are not people they are too much like Gods they interpret, they dont feel and they put one over no shame (72). Osam is at fault because he avoids the period of time. He doesnt mete out what Anowa chooses and he doesnt care to listen to his own wife.On page 78, Osam states his view about Anowa being immature. horizontal though he knows this, not once did he do anything to make her a more mature woman (78). On page 91, Badua states how she should have taught (Anowa) to marry a man. It is ironic considering she doesnt have a great pairing and chose a man who doesnt care. Badua and Osam are to blame for Anowas behavior. Anowa plays a massive role in the tragedy. Although she is not the only on e to blame, she is by far one of the main reasons for the suicides. There is nothing wrong with her abstracted to think and choose on her own.Yet she chooses a man she met off the road A man whom many find to be unsuit able for any woman in town. When she meets him, she has her legs and her breasts exposed (69). While Kofi and Anowa were swooning in the village, a woman looked back at them and falls over. They both laugh, finding the situation hilarious, entirely it shows the low maturity level they both have (69). When Kofi proposes, Anowa runs post and is screaming in the streets. Badua tells her she is marrying a fool, a watery male. Badua explains to Anowa that marriage is like a piece of clothits beauty passes with wear and tear. She was exhausting to explain that what counts is what is on the inside, not the outside. Anowa immediately responds with, I dont care (77). She is being childish and impulsive. She isnt thinking about what is shell for her. She is thinking abou t her own desires and is being selfish. No one in the story truly knows what is right or wrong. After she runs off with Kofi, she always argues with him. She states that she doesnt need any protection and that she can take care of herself. She believes she can do everything on her own. She is ignorant. Kofi responds with realism but she always wants to charge him regardless.There are times when Kofi wants to enlighten her with a new concept, such as medicine, but she immediately shoots him down. She is not open-minded and isnt willing to contribute anything for him (85). Yet she expects everyone else and Kofi to be open-minded. Anowa will talk to herself about Kofi rather than unsloped talking to Kofi about whats going on in her head. If she does not get her way, she exaggerates her emotions, like saying she was going to cut her throat. (90). For years, she knows she is unhappy and that she sees no future for herself with him.Instead of confronting that, she fights Kofi and reb els against everything he chooses. Anowas immaturity is seen even at the end of the book when she calls in everyone from town to tell of Kofis decision to drop by the wayside her out of the house and to expose him of his infertility and lack of masculinity (121). You cant blame people for not having the correct answer to everything, but its obvious that Anowa is partly to blame. Throughout the whole story, Kofi plays the victim. He manipulates the situation to make it seem as if he isnt at fault for anything and that he has made all the best choices he thinks he could have made.Just like Anowa, he talks to himself often about the problems within their affinity and how he feels but they never communicate those things together. When Anowa speaks her mind, Kofi asks who t gray-haired her that information, as if she couldnt think for herself. Kofi only lives by what other people say is right or wrong, rather than listening to himself. Anowa wants to keep working but he thinks they hav e the right to rest. He never makes a compromise with her stating that she could work if she genuinely wanted to. Kofi can tell that Anowa is unhappy but he could care less.He does nothing to make her feel happier. From the beginning of the story, the question of his masculinity is evolving. The old women explains how he combs his hair too much. (80). When Anowa begins to notice they are not able to have children, she believes she is at fault. When she offers to find Kofi another woman. This is the normal tradition for their culture, withal he becomes annoyed at her dish up. This is one time in the story where he chooses not to follow traditional ways. At one point, he wants to buy men and Anowa does not like this idea.She states that she doesnt need help from other men. Kofi says, if you dont, I do. (90). Which is still not a good explanation or reason for buying them. He explains that they will be helpers and that they wont be carrying him or anything of that sort. By the end of the book, these men are carrying him. But the Kofi of the trade in hard workerry, who ultimately depends on slave labor, is the Kofi of the excess that corrupts the soul. The new Kofi, who has made a pact with the devil of bodily success no amour at whose cost, is already dead considerable before his suicide (Ngugi wa Thiongo).Over time, Kofi begins to dress better and is always with the men he bought. He sees a doctor at one point in the story and finds out that he is unable to have children. Even though he has this information, he still blames Anowa as if it was her fault they couldnt have children. He never tells her that he is the one with the issue. Anowa brings up the issue again towards the end of the book. She says she wants to find him another wife to have children with and he gets mad at her. Anowa has an epiphany and asks, Are you dying? (117).She realizes that he is the one with the fertility problem and has keeping it from her. She states that his has exhausted his masculinity, that he is dead wood. (122). She does all of this in front of everyone in the community. She humiliates him and he runs off and shoots himself. She then drowns herself soon after. Everyone in the story was blaming everyone else. They all had different reasons and different opinions about who was to blame for the tragedy. overdue to Anowas untraditional spirit, many of the people blamed her for everything. The truth of the matter is that everyone in the story was at fault.No one wanted to communicate properly, no one was disciplined correctly, everyone had a huge ego and no one was willing to work anything out. Everyone was irrational and immature. Everyone is to blame for the suicides. Bibliography Literature of Developing Nations for Students, 2013 Gale Cengage. Retrieved at http//www. enotes. com/anowa. Ngugi wa Thiong0. Ama Ata Aidoo A Personal Celebration. April, 2012. Retrieved at http//www. newafricanmagazine. com/features/culture/ama-ata-aidoo-a-personal-ce lebration. Aidoo, Ama Ata, Anowa, Longman Group, 1970.

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