Cultural Revolutionary Aesthetics and Violence in Esiaba Irobi's Nwokedi and Hangmen Also Die
- Justina Aruma1*, Roseline Yacim, Ph.D2
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17360703
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UKR Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (UKRJAHSS)
Postcolonial Nigeria is characterized by enduring socio-political instability, entrenched corruption, and systemic marginalization. These challenges arising from the legacies of colonialism and subsequent misgovernance following independence are frequently manifested in Nigeria’s drama. Esiaba Irobi, a distinguished Nigerian playwright, presents a notable response to these issues through the medium of revolutionary drama, which is fundamentally rooted in indigenous cultural practices. This study thus examines how Irobi’s plays, Nwokedi and Hangmen Also Die, incorporate traditional Igbo performance techniques, including the Ekpe festival and masquerade rituals, as instruments of revolutionary transformation. Grounded in postcolonial theory, particularly the analytical frameworks of Frantz Fanon and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, the study further investigates the convergence of indigenous traditions and revolutionary violence as mechanisms for addressing systemic corruption and oppression. The study adopts a qualitative methodology through content analysis of the texts, which reveals that Irobi’s plays utilize indigenous cultural resources not as static elements of heritage, but rather as flexible instruments of resistance. The findings indicate that Irobi’s revolutionary drama serves as a significant cultural critique, effectively repositioning indigenous performance as a mechanism for decolonization, socio-political transformation, and collective empowerment. The study concludes that the strategic adaptation of cultural traditions within contemporary political discourse often serve as a vital alternative to the governance models imposed by Western influences, which have possibly proven ineffective in addressing the needs of postcolonial societies such as Nigeria.

