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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/970

Title: MYTH AND THE AFRICAN PLAYWRIGHT: OSOFICAN’S CRAFT IN MOROUNTODUN
Authors: Omeh, Obasi Ngwoke
Keywords: OSASS
Volume 1
Issue Date: Jun-2014
Publisher: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Abstract: The use of materials from folklore is one of the most sustained features of creative writing universally. Mythology is the greatest source of the said materials, and among the genres, drama appears to be mythology’s greatest client. One interesting aspect of scholarship on such myth-based works is the examination of the authors’ handling of the source material. Femi Osofisan’s Morountodun is one of the well-known African plays that are rooted in mythic sources. And many a scholar, including the author of the play himself, has commented on the handling of the myth in the play, but their comments affirm the same idea of a subversive use of the myth. None has tried to closely examine how the subversion is realized, a task which should probe the intricacies of the manipulation of the myth in the play. Thus, this neglected but inspiring aspect of the handling of the source material is the major concern enabling him to head the play towards a denouement that is different from that of its source.
URI: http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/970
ISSN: 2465-7395
Appears in Collections:Oye Studies in Arts and Social Sciences

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