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<title>FOLLOWERSHIP AND POST-INDEPENDENCE DISILLUSIONMENT IN SELECTED PLAYS OF FEMI OSOFISAN</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/650" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/650</id>
<updated>2026-04-09T04:24:27Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-09T04:24:27Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>FOLLOWERSHIP AND POST-INDEPENDENCE DISILLUSIONMENT IN SELECTED PLAYS OF FEMI OSOFISAN</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/651" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>AGUNBIADE, OYEWUMI OLATOYE</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/651</id>
<updated>2022-01-21T10:34:41Z</updated>
<published>2019-06-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">FOLLOWERSHIP AND POST-INDEPENDENCE DISILLUSIONMENT IN SELECTED PLAYS OF FEMI OSOFISAN
AGUNBIADE, OYEWUMI OLATOYE
Post-independence disillusionment, a condition whereby people are disappointed as a result of&#13;
socio-political failure in post-independence Africa, is one of the motifs that preoccupy&#13;
contemporary Nigerian drama. Existing studies on Femi Osofisan’s literary works have&#13;
approached this concern with a bias for scapegoating colonial and neo-colonial leaders as the&#13;
cause of Africa’s underdevelopment, while neglecting the role of the followership in the&#13;
collective predicaments. This study was, therefore, designed to examine the representation of the&#13;
complicity of followership in post-independence disillusionment in selected plays of Femi&#13;
Osofisan and the dramaturgical devices employed to enhance the representation. This is with a&#13;
view to establishing the contribution of the followers to their collective predicaments.&#13;
Robert Young’s version of Postcolonial Theory was adopted as framework, while interpretive&#13;
design was used. Nine plays of Osofisan were purposively selected for their representations of&#13;
post-independence disillusionment from the perspective of the ruled. The selected texts were&#13;
Fires Burn and Die Hard (Fires), Birthdays Are Not for Dying (Birthdays), Love’s Unlike&#13;
Lading (Love’s), Esu and the Vagabond Minstrels (Esu), Farewell to a Cannibal Rage&#13;
(Farewell), Aringindin and the Nightwatchmen (Aringindin), Altine’s Wrath (Altine’s), The&#13;
Inspector and the Hero (Inspector) and One Legend, Many Seasons (Legend). The texts were&#13;
subjected to critical analysis.&#13;
Actions and inactions of the followers in the selected plays demonstrate that ordinary people&#13;
contribute significantly to post-independence disillusionment and underdevelopment. Lawal&#13;
(Altine’s), Ereniyi (Inspector) and Alowolodu (Legend), who are hitherto common people, are&#13;
shown to behave and perform worse in leadership position than their predecessors. Esu and&#13;
Farewell depict how relatively privileged few, who should champion the cause of the voiceless,&#13;
betray their kinsmen through sycophancy and treachery, while Aringindin depicts the high&#13;
handedness of vigilante groups whose victims are equally commoners. In Fires, setting ablaze of&#13;
the market by Alhaja in order to conceal her dealing in contraband goods throws the rest of the&#13;
market women in untold hardship. The corrupt practices of the business associates of Kunle&#13;
Aremo’s father in Birthdays also project the followers as being as corrupt as their leaders.&#13;
Bassey’s usury practices in Love’s depict the exploitation of the masses, while other characters’&#13;
political apathy foregrounds insensitivity to their own predicaments. Dramaturgical devices are&#13;
used in the plays to enhance the playwright’s innovative representations of the dysfunctionality&#13;
of post-independence Nigeria. In Fires, Birthdays, Love’s and Inspector, aesthetics of masking,&#13;
Orunmila motif and symbolism are deployed to expose the followers. Satire, paradox and irony&#13;
are used in Esu, Farewell, Aringindin, Altine’s and Legend to lampoon the followers for being as&#13;
guilty as the leaders they accuse.&#13;
Femi Osofisan deploys satire, paradox, irony, among others, to portray the followers as complicit&#13;
in post-independence disillusionment in Nigeria. These plays point attention to followership as a&#13;
significant factor in post-independence development in Nigeria.
</summary>
<dc:date>2019-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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