Aesthetics of Cultures: The Yoruba Culture in Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame

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Date
2023
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ETKI: Journal of Literature, Theatre and Culture Studies
Abstract
Abstract In the face of world power tussle, many cultures today are endangered and threatened. As some have been widely encroached by foreign and imposing nations, some are on the track of extinction. Annexation ideologies and appropriation programs are developed by ambitious countries and under different shrouds to possess other national territories. A notable culprit is the western cultural hegemony and self sought imperialism which is otherwise sugar-coated as civilization. While many independent nations have assimilated foreign cultures in guises of education, migration, and foreign interventions, many nations still nurse the brunt of colonialism. Unfortunately, cultural etiolation continues today with many unsuspecting nations falling victims. The causations for the decline in the traditional gamut of these societies are often hinged upon various instances. A notable mention is the lost Harappan civilization. Once one of the oldest civilisations and often classified with the Mesopotamian, Chinese and Egyptian civilization, the Harappan civilisation has now plunged into a site of research and excavational discoveries. Also, Ajawa, a formal language of the people of Bauchi state in Nigeria has become extinct. Thus, there is no gainsaying that these extinction of cultural values and traditions portend detrimental consequences for our futures than benefits. This is the more reason efforts must be made towards documentation in as many forms as possible. Such preservation mission could help to save cultural values like that of the Yoruba people of western Nigeria and others which may be endangered soon. Playwriting is a way to keep the flag hoisted. Writers such as Ola Rotimi, Wole Soyinka, Femi Osofisan, Ahmed Yerima, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Ama Ata Aidoo, Efua T. Sutherland, Tawfiq al-Hakim, among many others must be reckoned with for their efforts on African literature. These literary works are archival of African cultures. It is in this light that this paper considers the Yoruba cultural aesthetics in Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame. Using literary analysis method, this paper categorises Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame as a play that documents the Yoruba indigenous culture and it examines Yoruba cultural elements like, oral tradition, dance, song, language, proverbs and wise-sayings, etc., in the play. This paper establishes the importance of documentation in cultural preservation. Some of the existing and endangered Yoruba cultural values are among those discussed in this paper. Imperatively therefore, to sustain African cultural values like that of the Yorubas, and keep them from extinction or obsolescence, efforts must be channelled towards writing plays and literature that document and celebrate African histories and cultures.
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Citation
Ogunmekan, Damilare. “Aesthetics of Cultures: The Yoruba Culture in Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame.” ETKI: Journal of Literature, Theatre and Culture Studies, vol. 3, no. 2, 2023, pp. 21-47.