2012
DOI: 10.1177/0021989411432518
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The body unbound: Ritual scarification and autobiographical forms in Wole Soyinka’s Aké: The Years of Childhood

Abstract: The scarification in Aké is invested with major significance apropos Soyinka’s ideas on African subjectivity. Scarification among the Yoruba is one of the rites of passage associated with personal development. Scarification literally and metaphorically “opens” the person up socially and cosmically. Personal formation and self-realization are enabled by the Yoruba social code brought into being by its mythology. The meaning of the scarification incident in Aké is profoundly different. Determined by the form of … Show more

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