Flirtations with eros from a black-eyed squint: romantic love in the oeuvre of ama ata aidoo

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Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Indiana University Press

Abstract

What’s love got to do with it? Everything—suggests Ama Ata Aidoo, whose oeuvre, virtually without exception, foregrounds romantic love as part of a woman’s well-being, obstacles to which constitute a decidedly feminist concern. Throughout Aidoo’s career, her fiction highlights romantic love as the human relationship that has the greatest potential to achieve social justice, since it often transgresses boundaries of ethnicity, race, class, and various social taboos. At a personal level, union through love represents a reconciliation of broader political differences. In this sense, as in a range of others to be considered, the personal is shown to be political. Romantic love in Aidoo’s project, furthermore, has the catalytic potential to transform and bring into congruence disjunct social relations, which, in a postcolonial context, disproportionately impact the lives of African women. The earliest recognition of the significance of eros in Aidoo’s meditation was an unconscious one, where she echoed the dominant assumption of the African literary scene at the time, which saw love as a trivial personal concern. In a provocative self-critique, Aidoo reverses her earlier position when she acknowledges her own preoccupation with love across her career. A careful study of Aidoo’s work suggests, however, that despite its power, romantic love finally is beset by obstacles to its realization, which leave social barriers in place and patriarchal structures untransformed. This black-eyed squint clearly does not see the world through rose-tinted glasses.

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Keywords

African literature, HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Other Germanic languages::English language, Romantic love, Flirtations, Black-eyed squint

Citation

Moolla, F.F., 2024. Flirtations with Eros from a Black-Eyed Squint: Romantic Love in the Oeuvre of Ama Ata Aidoo. Research in African Literatures, 54(2), pp.91-112.