Abstract
Poor health is one of the major problems contributing to high mortality rate in Nigeria. Apart from this, there still exists what seems to be an abysmal failure in the health systems. Such failures as poorly equipped hospitals and health care centres, inefficient staff, lack of adequate supervision and poor health communication strategies are notable. The theatre and other humanities, as major stakeholders are not playing aloof to these societal needs. This is evident in the numerous plays, films and performances that are targeted at health situations. Also, various developmental agencies have often used a variety of performance strategies to address diverse health concerns. Ola Rotimi’s Hopes of the Living Dead, Ama Ata Aidoo’s Anowa, Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts and Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman stand out as prominent dramatic contributions to health-related issues. Health Humanities as an emerging discipline seeks for a higher convergence between health and humanities. One of the major objectives of the discipline is to seek for the general wellbeing and good health for all. It is evident that both on the stage and on the page the full potentials of these plays with regards to their health imperatives have not been fully unlocked. Previous research carried out on these plays focused on other subjects treated by the playwrights while the health issues were vaguely mentioned or even neglected. The aim of this study is to interrogate the place of drama in addressing health issues through these plays. This study adopted the Historical- Descriptive Design. Literary and artistic tools of the qualitative research methodology were employed. Primary sources were In-Depth Interviews (IDIs), play texts and observations. Secondary sources were the internet, published materials such as, journals, books, undergraduate project reports, dissertations and theses. The theoretical framework that was adopted for this study is Drama Theory and Reader Response Critical Approach. The health issues raised by the playwrights and discussed in this study traverse reproductive and mental health problems all of which form part of major health issues militating against sustainable development in Nigeria today. The texts studied, serve as a deep rooted and timeless historic material that reflects the fears of a world plagued by different sicknesses and possible strategies to overcoming current/future health situations. The plays reveal that the collective will of a people to live, plays a key role in wellbeing and good health.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.0 Background of the Study
This study examines the role of drama in the quest for health awareness. It discusses the ways through which drama as a medium of development communication can bring positive changes to issues of health consciousness especially in terms of attitudinal reorientation. Various scholars like Oga S. Abah, Bene Madunagu, James Alachi, and Hyacinth Ichoku have provided strong evidence in their studies to establish that the prevalence of Public Health problems in Nigeria today has reached alarming proportions and there is need to seek other avenues of intervention. Rosalia Staricoff in Arts in Health: A Review of Medical Literature points out that, “The use of literature, creative writing and poetry in mental health services produce significant benefits for both the patient and the care provider. It enables patients to regain control over their mental well-being.”(20) Furthermore, Ikechukwu Erojikwe, Ndubuisi Nnanna and Jude Aguzie in Onyekukufa and Atu-Mma: Breaking the Barriers of Gender Discrimination in Health-Related Indigenous Masquerade Performances note that, “The high prevalence of various health challenges and sickness has contributed to high mortality rates among women and children in Nigeria. Among the causes of this situation are ignorance, illiteracy and lack of access to good health facilities especially among rural dwellers.” (1)
The need to examine the oscillating power of drama in health communication, advocacy and promotion is highly imperative. The interventionist approach which drama adopts will not only inculcate behavioural changes but will also endeavour to progressively bring a permanent solution to health crisis in Nigeria.
Iyorwuese Hagher in Theatre and Community through the Ages observes that:
A look at the Nigerian traditional theatre, literary theatre, and radical theatre, shows each genre as being very effective in taking a particular position that tally with held views on practices and practitioners. It is not a question of right or wrong type of theatre. Essentially the use of theatre through the generations has been to answer the question “theatre for what purpose, and for whom? (3)
In the light of the above, health humanities through drama is pivotal for the eradication of health problems. Health humanities as an emerging discipline attempts to look at areas of convergence between health and the humanities. Paul Crawford and others in Health Humanities note that:
There is a growing need for a new kind of debate at the intersection of the humanities and healthcare, health and well-being. In the recent past the field of medical humanities has grown rapidly, but it is timely and appropriate to address the increasing and broadening demand from other professions to become involved, to accommodate new sectors of the healthcare workforce and the public, and to extend ‘appliedness’ in relation to how arts and humanities knowledge and practices can inform and transform healthcare, health and well-being. (1)
The cross disciplinary approach which health humanities encourages, provides the grounds for theatre artists to become strong players in health practices. Therefore, theatre, film and various media of the performing arts can be used as strong intervention strategies to curb the menace of health concerns. Furthermore, the question asked by Victor Fuchs quoted by Hyacinth Ichoku “who shall live?” (11), is no longer a medical declaration alone. The
humanities and theatre precisely, has today become a major stakeholder in the pursuit of wellness and wellbeing of humanity.
The complexity of healthcare provision in the light of different illnesses plaguing mankind today cannot exclude health humanities as a reliable strategy for ameliorating ailments that are pervasive in our society today. Theatre has been identified as that strategy, the missing link that can help reduce the level of ignorance and illiteracy that presently undermine efforts at effective healthcare delivery. Austin Asagba, discussing the power of theatre to create change, quotes Irina Bokova, Director General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as averring that “Theatre has the power to move, inspire, transform and educate in ways that no other art form can. Theatre reflects both the extraordinary diversity of cultures and our shared human condition, in all its vulnerability and strength.” (18) In view of this Oga S. Abah one of the leading advocates of Theatre for Development (TfD) in “Perspective in Popular Theatre: Orality as a Definition of New Realities.” declares that:
In situations of deprivation, of poverty, of disease and of hunger, should theatre be complacent or should it be active in confronting issues, in shaping and indeed altering ways of thinking and seeing? I should think that theatre needs to declare itself an active practice in favour of enlightenment and change. This means that theatre should no longer restrict itself to simply reflecting society. It should be engaged in mediating society; and even more, it should be involved in critical intervention. Theatre should therefore be a practice in search of solution and action. This implies a new perspective, different from the conception of theatre for entertainment or purgation. (81)
It is pertinent to state that this study will help in establishing that theatre as an art form can contribute significantly in solving health problems in our society. After careful attempts to isolate the essential questions raised by earlier researchers and practitioners, this research identifies a crucial need for further interdisciplinary collaboration between performance studies and health research in Nigeria. Chukwuma Soludo argues that “It has been often said that when a doctor makes a mistake a patient dies, if perhaps an economist makes a mistake a nation dies”. (np) Probably, when a dramatist makes a mistake then the whole world may be in trouble. The seeming mistakes of some playwrights as we will discover have contributed to certain misinformation which might be seen as unacceptable.
1.1 Statement of the Problem
There exist so many health conditions that kill people daily in Nigeria. These health conditions are not limited to Nigeria alone, they are global problems. It could also be due to the problems associated with wellbeing and good health in general that actually motivated the United Nations to include health among the Seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The World Health Organization’s (WHO) definition of health as quoted by Richie Umeh in her inaugural lecture titled River Blindness: An Insight into Community Directed Management of Endemic Diseases states that “health is not just the mere absence of disease, but a state of physical, mental and social wellbeing.” (2) So much attention has been paid to particular health issues like HIV/AIDS, malaria and water related diseases by health communication practitioners.
This study will therefore evaluate the contributions of drama in health and health-related issues by casting our interest on Ola Rotimi’s Hopes of a Living Dead, Ama Ata Aiddo’s Anowa, Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts and Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman. These plays have often been neglected as plays illuminating health concerns and as such a study on them will possibly expose how they explore various health issues.
1.2 Research Questions
This study will be guided by the following questions.
1. What is health humanities?
2. What is the place of dramatic literature in health humanities?
3. How do the selected plays stand as examples of works on health humanities?
1.3 Objectives of the Study
The major objective of this study is to interrogate the place of drama in addressing health issues. Health humanities as an emerging discipline seek for a higher convergence between health and humanities. One of the major objectives of the discipline is to seek for the general wellbeing and good health for all. It is evident that both on the stage and on the page the full potentials of Rotimi’s Hopes of the Living Dead, Aidoo’s Anowa, Ibsen’s Ghosts and Miller’s Death of a Salesman with regards to their health imperatives have not been fully unlocked. Previous research carried out on these plays focused on other subjects treated by the playwrights while the health issues were vaguely mentioned or even neglected. Therefore, the specific objectives of this research are: to examine the concept of health humanities; to ascertain the role of dramatic literature in health humanities and to interrogate the selected plays as works on health humanities.
1.4 Significance of the Study
The quest to create a healthy society is one of the biggest challenges Nigeria and most low and medium income countries are facing today. So many people in the past have tried to evaluate drama as a communicative tool in ameliorating these problems. This research seeks in earnest to analytically assess the role of drama in combating the menace of health problems in our society. A successful completion of this research will benefit a variety of groups, organizations with similar interest on development communication in general and drama and health communication in particular. Theatre scholars, health agencies, policy
makers, public health workers, researchers, development agencies, donor agencies and aid organizations will find this research a valuable contribution to the role of drama in health communication and health humanities. It is also hoped that this research will evidence the view that drama as an aspect of the humanities is essential in creating the consciousness of health related problems in our society. Finally the research will also serve as a reference material for future researches as it is hoped that it will add to the existing body of scholarly work in Health Humanities.
1.5 Scope of the Study
This research will examine the contribution of drama in the health humanities. For effective understanding, the researcher will limit the study to Rotimi’s Hopes of a Living Dead, Aiddo’s Anowa, Ibsen’s Ghosts and Miller’s Death of a Salesman. However, other works such as Tor Iorapuu’s Had I Known, Emeka Nwabueze’s Faith of a Maiden and Solomom Iganure’s Grave Encounter that refer to health issue(s) will be used where they help to clarify our arguments or objectives of the study. In order to add efficacy to this research, the plays of study will be selected from Nigeria, Ghana, United States of America and Norway. The intention is to give a global dimension to the research. Since the researcher shall examine emerging interdisciplinary studies like medical humanities and health humanities, it becomes highly pertinent to look at classical works by committed artists that explicitly treat issues raised by this researcher.
Global trends in healthcare today seek for a serious paradigm shift from biology and medicine to the arts. This has given rise to so many recent strategies like entertainment- education, popular theatre, theatre for development and so many more. But this research will concern itself with health humanities; this is because of its capacity as a strong agent of change in healthcare today. The research will examine this as we proceed. Other plays that tackle other health issues such as Emeka Nwabueze’s A Dance of the Dead, Ola Rotimi’s
Gods are not to Blame, Femi Osofisan’s No more the Wasted Breed and John Pepper Clark- Bakederamo’s Song of a Goat shall be used to evaluate some of the health challenges in our society.
1.6 Theoretical Framework
The theoretical frameworks that this research will adopt are Drama Theory and Reader Response Critical Approach. The reason for this is that on the one hand, Drama Theory gives us the opportunity and the motivation to examine the plays as appropriate tools of behavioural change and attitudinal reorientation. The Reader Response Critical Approach on the other hand gives us the enabling environment to reread the play and find fresh interpretations from the reader’s perspective. In defining drama theory, Lawrence Kincaid states that:
The essence of drama is confrontation, which generates emotion. Emotion is the motivational force that drives the action of the characters, leading to conflict and its resolution. By means of involvement and identification, the confrontation and emotional response of the characters generate a corresponding emotional response in the audience. (150)
Furthermore, this theory will give us the negotiating gambit to analyse the plays as appropriate tools of health communication. Drama theory as a model system of communication identifies with the notion that we learn from what we see. According to Kincaid, drama theory focuses on how social relationships and emotions displayed in a drama affect audience behaviour. He argues that “by observing such changes in a drama some audience will undergo the same kind of change themselves.” (46) Kincaid in his article “Drama, Emotion, and Cultural Convergence” also maintains that, “the central idea of drama theory is that under emotional pressure created by perceived rigidity of their situation,
players are able to reframe the situation and change.” (139) This situation is applicable to audience members too. Thus the actor and audience can learn effectively from drama and the knowledge acquired will help to instigate change in behaviour and reorientation in attitudes. Drama theory will therefore help to drive the philosophy of this research to explain how a particular play can change relationships and behaviours. Kincaid explains that “when a character who exhibits undesirable behaviours converts to social desirable behaviour in order to resolve a dramatic confrontation, then the behaviour of the audience segment that identifies most closely with the character is expected to converge towards the segment already practicing the desirable behaviour, resulting in an increase in the socially desirable behaviour in the population…” (136) In view of this Esta De Fossard in explaining drama theory acknowledges that the audience will end up:
Observing what other people do; considering the consequences experienced by those people; rehearsing what might happen in their own lives if they followed other people’s behaviour; taking action by trying the behaviour themselves; comparing their experience with what happened to the other people; confirming their belief in the new behaviour. (58)
The malleability of drama enables the art form to operate in various segments and provides it with the enabling space and place to function as a powerful tool of communication. Aderaw Genetu equally maintains that drama has a greater effect on an audience than many other forms of communication. Quoting Kincaid he notes that “drama tells an engaging story. It involves audience emotionally. It depicts changes in characters with whom the audience identifies.” (32) To arrive at fresh appreciations of the texts under study and evaluate them within the health environment, the researcher will also be guided by the reader-response critical framework. Wolfgang Iser a leading proponent of this theory
provides a treatise of the approach in the preface to his book Prospecting: from Reader- Response to Literary Anthropology. He states that:
What has come to be called reader-response criticism provides a framework for understanding text processing, revealing the way in which the reader’s faculties are both acted upon and activated. By putting the response-inviting structures of a literary text under scrutiny, a theory of aesthetic response provides guidelines for elucidating the interaction between text and reader. (vii)
M. H. Abrams and Geoffrey Harpham in A Glossary of Literary Terms also acknowledge that “at least to some considerable degree, the meanings of a text are the “production” or “creation” of the individual reader, hence that there is no one “correct” meaning for all readers either of the linguistic parts or of the artistic whole of a text” (266). Since this research seeks to look at Rotimi’s Hopes of a Living Dead, Aiddo’s Anowa, Ibsen’s Ghosts and Miller’s Death of a Salesman with the intention to determine the space and place of drama in health humanities it will be necessary to also examine the views of Gerry Brenner in favour of the reader-response theory. He affirms that:
One virtue of reader-response criticism has been its allowance- some would say indulgence- of every reader’s interaction with the text he or she reads. Diverse though reader-response theorists and practitioners are, fundamental to the theory is its seldom-expressed goal of democratizing the practice of literary criticism. In theory it manipulates readers from subservience not only to the meanings assigned to a text by figures of authority and even its author, but also to the authority of the presumably objective text itself… (1)
It could be understood that this critical approach will enable us to critically assess the merit of these plays as works in health humanities. It provides us with enabling space and place to look at the plays again in the bid to see how they function and mediate within the health humanities environment. Ann Dobie in Theory into Practice: An Introduction to Liter ary Criticism affirms that:
The name reader-response tells the story. This approach to literary criticism turns the spotlight on the reader, without whose attention and reaction the text would be inert and meaningless. In one sense the work will not exist at all. (129)
1.7 Research Methodology
The method which a researcher adopts is dependent upon the type of research he is carrying out. This work involves both observation and interpretation. Research can also define research as a scientific and systematic search for pertinent information on a specific topic. Research may either be qualitative or quantitative but this study is more concerned with the qualitative aspect of research. Qualitative research attempts to broaden and/or deepen our understanding of how things came to be the way they are in our social world. All research, whether quantitative or qualitative must involve an explicit, disciplined, systematic approach to finding things out, using the method most appropriate to the question being asked. Beverley Hancock and others submit that, “Qualitative research is concerned with developing explanations of social phenomena. That is to say, it aims to help us to understand the social world in which we live and why things are the way they are.” (7) Qualitative research is designed to reveal a target audience’s range of behaviour and the perceptions that drive it with reference to specific topics or issues. It uses in-depth studies of small groups of people to guide and support the construction of hypotheses. The results of qualitative research
are descriptive rather than predictive. The aim of a qualitative research may vary from research to research.
This research will also explore the potentials of the literary research methodology perceivable in the qualitative research. In view of that, Guijuan Lin in “Higher Education Research Methodology-Literature Method” states that:
Literary research methodology is to read through, analyze and sort literatures in order to identify the essential attribute of materials. Its significant difference from other methodologies is that it does not directly deal with the object under study, but to indirectly access to information from a variety of literatures, which is generally referred to as “non-contact method.” Literature materials are the crystallization of wisdom, are the ocean of knowledge, have important values for the development of human society, history, culture and research scholars. (1)
This methodology empowers academic researchers to fully share information and to understand what our predecessors have achieved and the progress made by other researchers. However, in the ocean of knowledge of such a vast amount of information, a good academic study tends to manage data efficiently and concisely in order to achieve a good comprehension. This research identified four plays that have been more often read from a particular view point with the intention to delineate them as plays that deal with health issues as well. The researcher intends to interrogate these texts with the intention to negotiate their space and place within the confines of Health humanities. In this view, the study will attempt a re-reading of Ola Rotimi’s Hopes of a Living Dead, Ama Ata Aidoo’s Anowa, Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts and Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman with the intention of analysing and deriving alternative issues of health elaborately treated in these works. An alternate reading
of these plays will lead us to discuss health perspectives treated in them which are often neglected in critical analysis of the plays.
An attempt will be made to interrogate how these plays traverse health issues in relation to humanities. This is not to say that this research is trying to discover what is not obviously mentioned in other works. Rather it is the intention of this present discourse to bring to the fore issues that seem often neglected by previous scholars and critics who have studied these plays in the past. This research will therefore, try to discuss in detail and distil copious illustrations from the plays that place them as ideal works on health communication and health humanities. The interpretation of the primary plays in this study demands in greater measure a more elaborate research methodology that will incisively unearth the particularities of the thematic motifs in these plays that seem not to have been treated without depth and weightiness. It becomes appropriate to include the plays’ full ramifications on the degenerating state of health care delivery as a process of ensuring care, love and wellbeing for the sick and feeble in our society. For instance, in Ola Rotimi’s Hopes of the Living Dead, the ailment of Harcourt White’s and other lepers’ have been generally treated as a political metaphor rather than a very specific debilitation of the body that has drastically and negatively affected the survival and sociological advantage of the lepers in a discriminatory setting. In view of this, health humanities as a distinct practice in the delivery of medical service and health promotion seeks for convergence in a globalized world where synergy and teamwork are key to sustainable development.
The colonial government did not seek to alleviate the physical challenge of their suffering as a consequence of leprosy or empower them with basic infrastructure to overcome the psychological effects of stigmatization through a specialized housing and health facility dedicated to their wellbeing. Instead, it cast them off as refuse unfit for cohabitation with other humans. By using qualitative research to interrogate the lepers’ problem for what it
truly is a health problem in need of a convergence of medicine and social re-orientation, this research methodology is apt for proper contextualizing of the lepers’ problem as a case requiring urgency and broad spectrum solution.
By elevating the voice of the lepers as a microcosm of a globalized menace among humans (sick and potentially ill), one can discover new paths and open up new vistas for problem-solving in a broader and easier sense. Applying the qualitative literary research methodology does not stop at discussing the plays and the various health themes they discuss as ramifications and symbols for political or social re-engineering. Rather, it pursues the literal malady of the characters in the play texts, by extension our current society as a sick people requiring the attention of an apathetic society to honestly pay attention to a more robust means of solving their problems.
As stated earlier, qualitative literary research methodology probes into the motivations, the application and current relevance or lessons of the play to the extant challenges and how their interpretation or new interrogation can help our ailing world. Over the years, Willy Loman’s character in Miller’s Death of a Salesman has been treated with near disdain in the post depression era. He stands as a product of society obsessed with instant and great wealth at any cost. Willy Loman was such a man who suffered psychologically for his inability to realize his expectations which clearly was sold to him by the society which inculcated the illusory American dream to its individual constituents. Willy Loman in the recent past has been praised by many scholars and critics as a hero a tragic hero; Willy Loman in comparison to Oedipus has no nerve, courage or idea of heroism. Firstly his goal of being liked and the pursuit of success were anything but repulsive and vain. We are almost encouraged to emulate this nature of vanity which in itself was an asset that served to ultimately deal a fatal blow to its icon Willy Loman. Rather than treat Willy Loman as a hero, he should be considered as sick as Harcourt White and his fellow lepers, as sick as Oswald, Anowa and Kofi Ako.
Their debilitation whether physically, physiologically or psychologically should be seen as an infirmity and should attract our sympathy and empathy. Their existential struggle and the society’s aversion and indifference to the sick and potentially tragic personalities among and around us should be challenged. Although the plays chosen for this research work are drawn from several and different times, cultures, continents and vary thematically at least in emphasis and depth, they have a universal appeal to the researcher, which is that they treat the issue of health, wellness and wellbeing. The diversity of the plays and their socio-cultural ramifications can aptly be covered by the dynamic qualitative research. Qualitative research holds that understanding of a phenomenon or a concept or event comes from exploring the totality of the situation. Through the qualitative research method, this research work will attempt to address the place of drama in addressing health issues. The researcher will seek to trace the roles drama has played over time in human history and endeavour to ascertain its capacity and viability in taking on health problems especially in contemporary times. Qualitative research method has various tools at its disposal to ensure credible evidence- based research and findings.
The play Ghosts does not mention the venereal disease syphilis; but its symptoms are spelt out. Through this chosen research method, the researcher seeks to study the Norwegian culture in the 19th century and their understanding of the place of syphilis in their social or cultural framework. This will answer why the disease was chosen by the playwright as a theme and symbol in the play and whether it is pre-eminently relevant. The place of the play as a vehicle for inquiring into health humanities and its effect in the present circumstances would be explored. One of the many criticisms heaped on Ibsen is the supposition in Ghosts that syphilis is inherited.
A critical analysis of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman offers a reader or audience with the possibility of multiple interpretations as to why Willy Loman ended up a nervous wreck. By taking cognizance of the period of writing the play, the cultural values that prompted the work to be written and by extension the character of Willy Loman the implication and relevance of the play as a tool for a discourse on health humanities will be researched upon through the application of qualitative research method. By digging through massive volumes of historical data and comparing current cultural signage, it becomes clear that the qualitative research methodology is an appropriate means of finding new answers or proving the older assumptions.
It is necessary to state the relevance of dramatic literature in the interrogation of contemporary issues like the new discourse of health humanities. An unalloyed investigation of its contribution to arts and other spheres of knowledge will become imperative especially in the light of declining emphasis on the scribal tradition. This research will sift through data: historical documents, ancient writings, print and electronic media in order to effectively gauge the significance or otherwise of dramatic literature and subsequently its place in promoting such interdisciplinary challenge and discourse such as health promotion, entertainment-education, medical humanities, health humanities and other innovation that emphasizes synergy and collaboration between the arts and sciences.
Furthermore, while health humanities as a discipline seems exciting as another brainchild of cross-disciplinary research, one may wonder how classical and culturally- divergent plays like Hopes of the Living Dead, Anowa, Ghosts and Death of a Salesman found their ways into the category of health humanities. To determine the basis or parameters for subjecting these seemingly different plays into one classification, other points and aspects of qualitative research methodology will be pursued ranging from grounded theory foundational research, philosophical and critical social research methodologies among others may be employed to generate and holistically present precise findings and evidence-based result.
Qualitative research methodology continues to expand its horizons and reach including borrowing from its predecessor quantitative research methodology to buttress its point especially as it relates to case studies. To analyse qualitative data, that will form the remaining part of this study, the researcher seeks meaning from all of the data that is available to him as the research progress on in order to make informed choices and create a platform for further detailed research on the subject at hand. The qualitative research methodology will therefore be adopted for this study while the literary method of data analysis will be used as an appropriate tool of the qualitative methodology that will aid this study. The materials for this research will be collected through libraries, internet, plays, magazine, journals, in-depth interviews (IDIs) and email interviews. The Modern Language Association (MLA) documentation style will be used to provide written acknowledgement of sources of information.
This study is divided into five chapters. The first chapter introduces the study. It also discussed the Problem of Study, stated the Research Questions, Objectives of the Study, Scope of Study, Significance of the Study, Theoretical Framework and the Research Methodology. The second Chapter is the Review of Related Literature. The third chapter will discuss role of drama in the emerging discipline of health humanities and look at plays like Solomon Iguanre’s Grave Encounter, Tor Iorapuu’s Had I Known, Ola Rotimi’s The Gods are not to Blame, John Pepper Clark-Bekederemo’s Song of a Goat, Femi Osofisian’s No More the Wasted Breed, Emeka Nwabueze’s Fate of a Maiden and A Dance of the Dead that have treated various health issues. The fourth chapter will analyse the space and place of drama in health humanities using the primary texts selected for the study. The fifth chapter which is the last will conclude the study and offer some recommendations.
The next chapter is the Review of Related Literature. Previous works on Ola Rotimi’s Hopes of the Living Dead, Ama Ata Aidoo’s Anowa, Henrik Ibsen’s Ghost and Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman will be analysed. Critical interpretations by scholars and critics on the plays under study will also be discussed in this chapter
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