Endogenous and exogenous factors in national development: inferences from the metaphor of witchcraft (Àjé) in Ọlátúbòsún Ọládàpò's poetry

This work engages political commentary in the work of &#7884;látúb<img src="/img/revistas/tvl/v48n1/a13car03.jpg" align="absmiddle" >sún Oládàp<img src="/img/revistas/tvl/v48n1/a13car03.jpg" align="absmiddle" >, a Yorùbá poet. Its focus is on the way that political ideas and values that are rooted in Nigerian culture can inspire development. The study is an exegesis of a poem entitled Emi lo ó máa fàj<img src="/img/revistas/tvl/v48n1/a13car01.jpg" align="absmiddle" ><img src="/img/revistas/tvl/v48n1/a13car02.jpg" align="absmiddle" > r&#7865; s&#7865;? ("What will you do with your own witchcraft?). The reading explores the multilayered paradoxes and metaphors of witchcraft in the poem, concluding that the God-given abilities and capabilities possessed by Nigerians should be the bases for solving their national problems as the nation needs leaders of a vision and mission. The poet maintains that the Nigerian political leaders have a critical role to play in changing the fortune of the nation by leading by example. In addition, the poet opines that the single factor that explains the national economic stagnation is the lack of integrity and public spiritedness among the political leaders, illustrated through his metaphor of witchcraft

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ajibade,George Olusola
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Tydskrif vir Letterkunde Association, Department of Afrikaans, University of Pretoria 2011
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0041-476X2011000100013
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