Abstract

This work explores Esiaba Irobi’s Cemetery Road (2009) and Ojo Rasaki Bakare’s Once Upon a Tower (2000) with a view to examining the manner in which Irobi and Bakare represent the Nigerian academic elite in the chaos that hobbles Nigerian public universities and the country in general. Through Louis Althusser’s idea of Ideological State Apparatuses, the work analyses how the two playwrights deploy character, setting and other dramatic elements to capture ways in which the Nigerian academic elite, especially those in Nigerian public universities, promote disorder in the polity. The two plays show that some members of the Nigerian academic elite are involved in using undemocratic methods for personal gains and to create anomie in universities and in Nigerian society at large. The work reveals that the academic elite, as represented in the two plays, are not different from the corrupt Nigerian political elite because both are preoccupied with violent and corrupt acts, thereby undermining peace, stability and development in the country. It contends that the two playwrights’ representations of the Nigerian academic elite are important not only because they challenge the assumed binary opposition between the Nigerian ruling elite and the Nigerian academic elite, but also because they illuminate the complexity of the recurring chaos in Nigerian universities and the country in general. Consequently, the playwrights invite the Nigerian academic elite to engage in critical self-interrogation, genuine scholarly and community-based activities that are geared towards real national development.

Highlights

  • In postcolonial Africa, the notion that universities are springs of knowledge is often taken as gospel truth

  • This work has examined the role of the members of Nigerian academic elite in the chaos in Nigerian public universities and the country in general as represented in Esiaba Irobi’s Cemetery Road (2009) and Ojo Rasaki Bakare’s Once Upon a Tower

  • Through Louis Althusser’s insight of Ideological State Apparatuses, the work has demonstrated the ways in which the members of the Nigerian academic elite, especially those in Nigerian public universities, promote chaos in the polity

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Summary

Nurudeen Adeshina Lawal

Citation: Lawal, Nurudeen A. “Chaos in the Ivory Tower: Postcolonial Representations of the Nigerian Academic Elite in Esiaba Irobi’s Cemetery Road and Ojo Rasaki Bakare’s Once Upon a Tower.” Alicante Journal of English Studies, no. 33 (2020): 63-83. https://doi.org/10.14198/raei.2020.33.05 Licence: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).

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