Nasula the Iroko in Binwell Sinyangwe’s A Cowrie of Hope
Journal cover Journal of Gender and Power, volume 19, no. 1, year 2023
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Keywords

resilience
adversity
iroko
Binwell Sinyangwe

How to Cite

Iboroma, I. E. (2023). Nasula the Iroko in Binwell Sinyangwe’s A Cowrie of Hope. Journal of Gender and Power, 19(1), 49–63. https://doi.org/10.14746/jpg.2023.19.1.4

Abstract

Drawing insights from Resilience Theory, this paper critically analyzes the survival and coping strategies of Nasula in the face and wake of adversity in Binwell Sinyangwe’s A Cowrie of Hope. The aim is to affirm that human beings have the potential to rise above the vicissitudes of life through resilience, the obstacles notwithstanding. The paper demonstrates the strength, innovativeness and agency of Nasula in her struggle to fulfil her strong desire to send her daughter, Sula, to high school. The paper posits that hope and determination inspired by resilience equip Nasula to rise above all the traumatic circumstances that confront her to write her daughter’s future through education. Her determined and resilient response to her adversity informs the metaphoric title of this paper, ‘Nasula the Iroko’, and Iroko in Igbo worldview stands as a metaphor for strength, mobility and resilience. All these qualities are enshrined in Nasula. The paper concludes that Nasula’s resilience is an inspirational model that may strengthen the innate resilient capacities of the readers, both men and women, to rise above adversity, especially women in whose minds the patriarchal definition of the woman as a weaker vessel has been engraved.

https://doi.org/10.14746/jpg.2023.19.1.4
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