Affiliation:
1. University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison, WI USA
Abstract
Abstract
In this paper, I rethink thuggery, an overt form of dissent, as a spatial structural frame. Through a close reading of everyday forms of thuggery in Nigeria, exemplified in literary, musical, and photographic forms, I argue that not only is thuggery ubiquitous in the African postcolony but also that it is the means by which the citizenry assert their citizenship, structure their space, and perform democracy. I use the phrase “proximate thuggery” in two ways: first, to broaden the commonplace definition of thuggery as violent antisocial behavior which does not hold up in many postcolonial states where there seems no line separating the violent from the non-violent, where the insidiously violent masquerades as non-violent; and second, to signal the quotidian nature of dissent and therefore refocus attention on those manifestations of thuggery even in corridors of power. If the purpose of critical cultural studies is to understand a problem from its roots in order to suggest useful solutions, it seems fitting to pay attention to everyday, non-spectacular forms of dissent—for, among other reasons, attention to overt forms of dissent isolates them as anomalies and leads to inadequate solutions.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies
Reference37 articles.
1. Adéẹ̀kọ́, Adélékè. Arts of Being Yorùbá: Divination, Allegory, Tragedy, Proverb, Panegyric (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017).
2. Adeniyi, Mubaidat Adenrele & Mopelola Olugbemisola Omoegun. “Rehabilitative Strategies as Template for Addressing the Adjustment Problems of Area Boys and Girls in the Lagos Metropolis,” Journal of Psychosocial Research 8.2 (2013): 157–165.
3. Anikulapo-Kuti, Fela. “Shuffering and Shmiling,” Shuffering and Shmiling (Lagos: Coconut, 1978).
4. Bhabha, Homi. “Of Mimicry and Man: The Ambivalence of Colonial Discourse,” Discipleship: A Special Issue on Psychoanalysis 28 (1984): 125–133.
5. Chatterjee, Amal. Representations of India, 1740–1840: The Creation of India in the Colonial Imagination (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 1998).