Akuabata is a 2008 drama by Nigerian playwright Ahmed Yerima. Published by Kraft Books Ltd, the play is set in South-Eastern Nigeria and explores Igbo cultural tradition, gender fluidity, and the scapegoat archetype.[1]
Plot
Olanma is betrothed at age twelve to Iyieke, a family god. She later marries Isiugwu, a prince, and performs traditionally male duties such as farming and property inheritance. When the family neglects Iyieke's worship, the god attacks Olanma and demands her returns as his wife. Olanma resists and converts to Christianity. Her daughter, Obiageli, ultimately sacrifices herself to Iyieke to prevent the family's destruction.[2][3]
Themes
The central themes include the clash between traditional religious bondage and individual agency, the scapegoat archetype, gender fluidity as either empowerment or subjugation, and the sacrificial role of women in maintaining family and communal stability.[1][2][4]
Reception and critical analysis
Adeleke Adegboyega describes how Olanma and her daughter Obiageli are treated as "sacrificial lambs" for the community, noting that Olanma is portrayed as a matriarchal figure who enjoys privileges usually reserved for men, such as inheriting property and leading prayers.[2] Oyinyechi Anyalenkeya argues that the gender fluidity in Akuabata is a tool for subjugation and serial abuse of Olanma, making her a scapegoat; she contends that being called Akuabata (our wealth has come) and given male privileges are not true honors but a "huge burden," rendering Olanma a "woman ungendered."[1] Saeedat Aliyu explores the gender fluidity in the play, noting that Olanma inherits property, sits in men's meetings, and farms "like a hungry lioness" while her husband cooks and cleans.[4] Adeolu Babatunde Adeniji investigates Yerima's cultural dramaturgy, observing that his works are "culture-based dramatic text" that project the cultural values of Nigeria's three major ethnic groups.[5]
References
- Anyalenkeya, O. (2020). "Negotiating the Trajectory of Gender Fluidity in Ahmed Yerima's Akuabata". Okike: An African Journal of New Writing.
- Adegboyega, A. (2022). "A Critical Analysis of Feminist Aesthetics in Selected Plays of Ahmed Yerima". SSRN Electronic Journal. doi:10.2139/ssrn.5138817. ISSN 1556-5068.
- Yerima, A. (2008). Akuabata. Kraft Books Limited.
- Aliyu, S. B. (2024). "Negotiating Patrilineal Structures: A Feminist Reading of Ahmed Yerima's Akuabata and Odenigbo". Journal of Studies in the English Language. 19 (1): 126–147. doi:10.64731/jsel.v19i1.272196. ISSN 2672-989X.
- Odebunmi, A. (2006). "A pragmatic reading of Ahmed Yerima's proverbs in Yemoja, Attahiru, and Dry Leaves on Ukan Trees". Intercultural Pragmatics. 3 (2). doi:10.1515/IP.2006.010. ISSN 1612-295X.