1. Ethno-Cultural Construction of Femininity in Igbo Folklore.- 2.Women as the unsung breadwinners in igbo cosmology in chinua achebe’s things fall apart and arrow of god .- 3.women as agents of change in some dance traditions of orogun people of delta state.- 4: the dynamics of traditional power structure: women, culture and leadership in achebe’s things fall apart.- 5: female engagement and nollywood in postmodern africa.- 6: gender issues in the nigerian public relations profession.- 7: influence of television viewing on eating disorders among female nigerian undergraduates of universities of jos and lagos.- 8: ict as a tool for women’s empowerment.- 9: towards women’s career advancements: the banality of recognition of marital rape in nigeria.- 10: leadership and gender diversty on corporate board in nigeria.- 11: customary law of succession in nigeria: re-thinking the legal status of women .- 12: the objectives of gender studies in translation.- 13: social media re-victimization and stigmatization of sexual assault victims: exploring the representation and social reactions of sexual assault cases in Nigeria.
Mobolanle Sotunsa has authored and (co)edited several volumes including Feminism and Gender Discourse: The African Experience, Women in Africa: Contexts, Rights, Hegemonies, Gender Culture and Development in Africa, Expressions of Indigenous and Local Knowledge in Africa, and Imagining Vernacular Histories: Essays in Honour of Toyin Falola.
Anthonia Makkwemoisa Yakubu is Associate Professor of Gender and Oral Literature at National Open University of Nigeria, Lagos. Her research interests are in the areas of gender, autobiography, film, and oral folklore, and she has published a number of papers in these subject areas, including editing a 4-volume biographical compendium on African women.
This book will provide empirical engagements of Nigerian women in the private and public spaces and their adaptations, alterations and integration of the private and public spaces. This approach is contrary to most existing studies which may not necessarily provide contextual and empirical evidences of the debates about the spaces of women or interrogate both the private and public spaces in a single volume. This book will offer a novel insight into gender and power dynamics, especially as it relates to the cultural spaces, private spaces and public spaces which Nigerian women occupy and subjugate. The essays in this book critically examine the Nigerian women in different positions within the private and public spaces, the strong inhibiting presence of patriarchy, and the resistance women display to empower themselves.
Mobolanle Sotunsa has authored and (co)edited several volumes including Feminism and Gender Discourse: The African Experience, Women in Africa: Contexts, Rights, Hegemonies, Gender Culture and Development in Africa, Expressions of Indigenous and Local Knowledge in Africa, and Imagining Vernacular Histories: Essays in Honour of Toyin Falola.
Anthonia Makkwemoisa Yakubu is Associate Professor of Gender and Oral Literature at National Open University of Nigeria, Lagos. Her research interests are in the areas of gender, autobiography, film, and oral folklore, and she has published a number of papers in these subject areas, including editing a 4-volume biographical compendium on African women.