Towards an 'African Medical Humanities': Examining Mental Health in Nigerian Contemporary Literature through an African-Centred Approach

Autori/Autrici

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54103/2035-7680/27244

Parole chiave:

contemporary Nigerian literature; African Medical Humanities; Narrative Medicine; mental health; Abiku/ogbanje

Abstract

The significance of adopting an African-centric approach when examining traditional West African medicine and cultural practices related to healthcare and the body cannot be overstated. In the fields of humanities and social sciences, there has been a tendency to prioritize Euro-centric scholarship at the expense of exploring the belief systems of people of African descent. However, recognising the West African indigenous world-view is a crucial first step in challenging Euro-American epistemological dominance and enabling a more comprehensive analysis of healthcare practices.

Against this backdrop, the present research proposes the term ‘African Medical Humanities’ with the aim of deconstructing Euro-centric universalism and offering an alternative framework for studying health-related phenomena in sub-Saharan African creative writing. Specifically, the analysis will focus on the works of two Nigerian contemporary writers by examining the Abiku/ogbanje (spirit child) motif in relation to mental health and traditional African therapeutics.

The study will pay particular attention to Helen Oyeyemi’s The Icarus Girl (2005) and Akwaeke Emezi’s Freshwater (2018), investigating how these works address mental health and personhood within indigenous therapeutics among West African societies. Through this analysis, the present contribution demonstrates how spirituality is deeply embedded in traditional healthcare practices, thereby reflecting the importance of adopting an African-centric approach to understanding healthcare and the body in West African societies.

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Biografia autore/autrice

Aminat Emma Badmus, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

Aminat Emma Badmus is a Ph.D candidate in the Language and Culture Department of Università degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia (Italy). Her research interests extend across a diverse range of subjects including transnationalism, gender and queer studies, narrative medicine and the interplay between illness and culture in West African literature. Her ongoing dissertation project sets out to explore from transnational feminist and linguistic-stylistic perspectives how modern Nigerian narratives portray transnational experiences of migration in Euro-American contexts and its implication in relation to identity, gender and culture.

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Pubblicato

2024-11-30

Come citare

Badmus, Aminat Emma. 2024. «Towards an ’African Medical Humanities’: Examining Mental Health in Nigerian Contemporary Literature through an African-Centred Approach». Altre Modernità, n. 32 (novembre):67-80. https://doi.org/10.54103/2035-7680/27244.