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the father figure, in light of the political and historical contexts above is constructed in
Purple Hibiscus and
Everything Good Will Come. In the postcolonial contexts of these texts, the father represents the patronymic continuity between the colonial and postcolonial nation-state. This stature is related to Nigeria‟s
history of military governance, whose face is represented by father figures. These father figures feign magnanimity and religious belief in public while perpetuating human rights atrocities through bureaucratic back channels. This Janus-faced nature leads us to a second perspective of what constructed this father figure religion. Religion in Nigeria is an influential factor in the construction of identities, be they political, social or cultural. The regional politics in Nigeria that curved out geographies of violence as Toyin Falola (1998) discusses, were partly created at the altar of religion. The Northern, South-Eastern and South-Western regional blocks that have become dominant and normative political zones in Nigeria have been historicised in the consolidation of religious beliefs across time – before, during and after colonialism. Islam and Christian religions reinforced a patriarchal discourse of fatherhood. Moreover, because of political and economic turbulence
caused by corruption, mass poverty created a convenient ground for the entrenchment of religious belief. Political protagonists also played upon this atmosphere by continuously embezzling funds for personal gains while appealing to divine intervention with messages of hope. Hence, the idea of the father comes with the legitimacy of religious practice and the selective demands of religion that provide political expediency and the consolidation of power. Religion becomes essential to defining the hold on power and its performance. This performance is aided by communal victimhood, a condition that helps to entrench the pursuit of religion as not only escape from the socioeconomic and political turbulence, but also reflective of a genuine hankering after human dignity. The military regimes, continuously seen as interim solutions to governance slowly got trapped by the allure of power and used whatever means at their disposal to legitimise their hold on power. Under the charade of a cleanup exercise, a repressive grammar developed. The
193 extrajudicial repressive state apparatuses crushed
dissent through torture, public flogging, executions, and unexplained disappearances of dissenting individuals under the pretext of cleaning up the mess left behind by civilian governance. Rhetoric of discipline became, during this time, away to sanction the use of violence by the (military) state. The perpetual image of the state as the father and the citizens its children helped sanction
the use of corporal punishment, public executions and torture while at the same time dispense wealth and property to specified elites to maintain the image of a magnanimous fatherhood. The state, represented by the military figure and his foot soldiers embodies a paterfamilias who clamps down on dissenting children for their own good and for the good of the nation From the above description of the political and historical canvas,
Purple Hibiscus and
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