RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’

This paper introduces the concept of ‘butification’ to critically examine the portrayal of disability in African drama. Building on existing scholarship in disability studies, particularly the works of Tom Shakespeare, Ludmilla Jordanova, and Robert Murphy, it highlights how African dramatic liter...

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Main Authors: Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́, John IWUH
Format: Article
Language:Bulgarian
Published: Academic Research and Culture Association 2025-07-01
Series:Linguarum Universe
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/records/15755029
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author Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́
John IWUH
author_facet Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́
John IWUH
author_sort Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́
collection DOAJ
description This paper introduces the concept of ‘butification’ to critically examine the portrayal of disability in African drama. Building on existing scholarship in disability studies, particularly the works of Tom Shakespeare, Ludmilla Jordanova, and Robert Murphy, it highlights how African dramatic literature perpetuates reductive and dehumanising depictions of disabled individuals. These portrayals often frame disability as an anomaly or burden, focusing on what disabled individuals lack or how their conditions must be overcome for societal healing or order. It analyses key African plays such as Wole Soyinka’s Swamp Dwellers, The Strong Breed and Mad Men and Specialists, Femi Osofisan’s Morountodun and Women of Owu, Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame and Hopes of the Living Dead, and finds a recurring pattern where disabled characters are portrayed as sacrificial or marginalised “others.” To address this, the paper proposes a shift from ‘butification’ to ‘nowification,’ advocating for representations that highlight the complexity, agency, and autonomy of disabled individuals. ‘Nowification’ reimagines disabled characters not as burdens, but as integral parts of human diversity, possessing dynamic identities and contributing to societal narratives. This theoretical shift aims to bridge the gap in African literary and theatrical traditions by promoting more ethical and inclusive portrayals that reflect the lived realities of people with disabilities. Through this lens, the paper advocates for a paradigm shift in African drama, promoting nuanced and empowering depictions that can reshape cultural understandings of disability and enrich the broader discourse on disability representation.
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spelling doaj-art-e48cfe60ca1a4fbe8050c830b6bb4e942025-07-01T18:57:00ZbulAcademic Research and Culture AssociationLinguarum Universe3033-08152025-07-012220621810.5281/zenodo.15755029RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́0John IWUH1Bowen University, Iwo, NigeriaRedeemer’s University, NigeriaThis paper introduces the concept of ‘butification’ to critically examine the portrayal of disability in African drama. Building on existing scholarship in disability studies, particularly the works of Tom Shakespeare, Ludmilla Jordanova, and Robert Murphy, it highlights how African dramatic literature perpetuates reductive and dehumanising depictions of disabled individuals. These portrayals often frame disability as an anomaly or burden, focusing on what disabled individuals lack or how their conditions must be overcome for societal healing or order. It analyses key African plays such as Wole Soyinka’s Swamp Dwellers, The Strong Breed and Mad Men and Specialists, Femi Osofisan’s Morountodun and Women of Owu, Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame and Hopes of the Living Dead, and finds a recurring pattern where disabled characters are portrayed as sacrificial or marginalised “others.” To address this, the paper proposes a shift from ‘butification’ to ‘nowification,’ advocating for representations that highlight the complexity, agency, and autonomy of disabled individuals. ‘Nowification’ reimagines disabled characters not as burdens, but as integral parts of human diversity, possessing dynamic identities and contributing to societal narratives. This theoretical shift aims to bridge the gap in African literary and theatrical traditions by promoting more ethical and inclusive portrayals that reflect the lived realities of people with disabilities. Through this lens, the paper advocates for a paradigm shift in African drama, promoting nuanced and empowering depictions that can reshape cultural understandings of disability and enrich the broader discourse on disability representation.https://zenodo.org/records/15755029disability portrayalafrican drama‘butification’‘nowification’inclusivityadvocacystereotypes
spellingShingle Shalom ÌBÍRÓNKẸ́
John IWUH
RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
Linguarum Universe
disability portrayal
african drama
‘butification’
‘nowification’
inclusivity
advocacy
stereotypes
title RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
title_full RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
title_fullStr RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
title_full_unstemmed RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
title_short RENEGOTIATING THE DEPICTION OF DISABILITIES IN AFRICAN DRAMA: FROM ‘BUTIFICATION’ TO ‘NOWIFICATION’
title_sort renegotiating the depiction of disabilities in african drama from butification to nowification
topic disability portrayal
african drama
‘butification’
‘nowification’
inclusivity
advocacy
stereotypes
url https://zenodo.org/records/15755029
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