Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Nigerian Woman in Buchi Emecheta's "The Slave Girl". Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which
examines the role of the Nigerian Woman in Buchi Emecheta's "The Slave Girl."
Bibliography lists 5 additional sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAbuchi.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a simple family, who suffers greatly at the hands of slavery and the encroaching European society. Her journey is a journey of life. In her beginning we see how "Emecheta
creates a view of childhood as that stage in life where some freedom exists, freedom to be oneself, to be indulged, yet essentially a time that imparts the illusion that
the future will continue as such" (Dillon ed3.html). As her journey continues she finds that life is not necessarily as she once thought, and that freedom she ignorantly saw as
life, disappears, replaced by her role as a Nigerian woman. In the following paper we examine Emechetas story and illustrate how the Nigerian woman is portrayed in the novel.
The Nigerian Woman One of our first introductions to the Nigerian woman is through the character of Ojebetas mother. Ojebetas mother and father are both incredibly devoted parents. As
Dillon states, "Ojebetas parents coddle her, allowing her to breast feed for a long time: Let her suck: maybe that will help her realize how much we love and want
her (The Slave Girl, 23), her father says. The previous deaths of all their girl children spur Umeadi and Okwuekwu to outfit Ojebeta with charms to keep away tempting spirits
from the land of the dead, and she was cherished and marked with special tattooes (21)" (ed2.html). In this we see a Nigerian woman who is perhaps emotionally equal with
her husband. They are a couple who is clearly very connected and concerned with their daughter. Now, while this does not tell us much of a Nigerian womans position in
society, it does speak of the relationship a husband and wife may have in private and that is an incredibly important aspect of being a woman in a culture such
...