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<title>A MASCULINIST INVESTIGATION OF MALE REPRESENTATIONS IN SELECTED FEMINIST NOVELS OF CALIXTHE BEYALA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1825</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-04T17:06:20Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1826">
<title>A MASCULINIST INVESTIGATION OF MALE REPRESENTATIONS IN SELECTED FEMINIST NOVELS OF CALIXTHE BEYALA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1826</link>
<description>A MASCULINIST INVESTIGATION OF MALE REPRESENTATIONS IN SELECTED FEMINIST NOVELS OF CALIXTHE BEYALA
TOKUNBO, YEKINI MOUHAMMED
Representations of the male in feminist discourse generally tend towards the negative.&#13;
Existing studies on male representations have focused on the feminist perspective, with little&#13;
attention paid to the masculinist viewpoint. This study is, therefore, designed to examine&#13;
the representations of masculinity in male characters of Calixthe Beyala, with a view to&#13;
balancing perspectives on male representations.&#13;
Robert W. Connell’s Masculinity Theory is adopted as the framework, while the interpretive&#13;
design is employed. Two novels of Calixthe Beyala―Le Petit prince de Belleville (Petit)&#13;
and Maman a un amant (Maman)―were purposively selected based on their demonstration&#13;
of the masculinity types. The novels were subjected to explication de text.&#13;
Four major masculinity types were identified in the male characters of the selected novels:&#13;
the hegemonic, the complicit, the subordinate and the marginalised masculinities.&#13;
Hegemonic masculinity is exhibited by male characters in the community of Belleville, such&#13;
as Abdou, Monsieur Kaba and the police men: as seen in their domineering, violent and&#13;
exploitative relationships with women in both Petit and Maman. Hegemonic masculinity is&#13;
observed in the ways patriarchal characters like Abdou invested much in ensuring that their&#13;
male children sustain patriarchy: Abdou’s interdiction des tâches ménagères (forbids his&#13;
son from participating in house chores) in Petit and Maman. Toxic hegemonic masculinity&#13;
of the male characters towards the female characters in Petit and Maman leads to unwanted&#13;
pregnancies and prostitution by Aminata and Esther, divorces for Mathilda and M’am, and&#13;
death for Soumana in Petit. Complicit masculinity is identified as benign towards women.&#13;
There are men like Kouam, Laforêt and Inspector Antoine whose masculinity is benevolent&#13;
towards their wives in Petit and Maman. Kouam overlooks his wife’s excesses by allowing&#13;
her to smoke, drink and go to bars, which is unacceptable for a Muslim wife; while Laforêt&#13;
supports Caroline’s decision to leave him to cater for three children in Petit and Maman.&#13;
Subordinate masculinity is found in homosexuals: gays and lesbians like Nkomo and&#13;
Mathilda are portrayed as persecuted members of the society in Petit. The homophobic men&#13;
of Belleville perceive Nkomo as a whore, who sleeps with his male bosses for promotions&#13;
in Petit. They judge Kouam as unmanly, because his wife left him and became a lesbian in&#13;
Petit. Marginalised masculinity is exhibited in the dynamics of the relationship between the&#13;
subjugated blacks and the white supremacists, which is depicted in Abdou’s powerlessness&#13;
before his white rival, Monsieur Tichit, who seduces and sleeps with his wife M’am in&#13;
Maman. Marginalised masculinity is perceived in the fear of the black men of Belleville in&#13;
confronting the white man that eloped with Abdou’s wife in Maman. Their initial bravado&#13;
became emasculation before a superior white supremacist masculinity. Marginalised&#13;
masculinity is shown also in the helplessness of Abdou and other black men in Belleville&#13;
against the racism of the white policemen in Maman.&#13;
Calixthe Beyala’s deployment of the hegemonic, complicit, subordinate and marginalised&#13;
masculinities in Petit and Maman, balances the customary malevolent portrayals of men in&#13;
feminist novels.
</description>
<dc:date>2022-10-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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