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<title>TRAUMA AND TRAUMATOGENIC INSCRIPTIONS IN NIGER DELTA POETRY</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1930</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 05:57:04 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-20T05:57:04Z</dc:date>
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<title>TRAUMA AND TRAUMATOGENIC INSCRIPTIONS IN NIGER DELTA POETRY</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1931</link>
<description>TRAUMA AND TRAUMATOGENIC INSCRIPTIONS IN NIGER DELTA POETRY
ESAMAGU, Blessing Ochuko
The discourse of environmental degradation captures monumental losses which culminate&#13;
in trauma, and this largely informs the content as well as the form of Niger Delta poetry.&#13;
Existing studies on critical engagements with ecological issues in Niger Delta poetry have&#13;
emphasised the physical destruction and pollution of the environment, with little attention&#13;
paid to the subject of trauma in the poetry. This study was, therefore, designed to examine&#13;
trauma and traumatogenic inscriptions in selected eco-conscious poetry collections from the&#13;
Niger Delta region. This was with a view to determining the insignias of trauma induced by&#13;
ecological disaster and the literary devices deployed in foregrounding this relationship.&#13;
Stef Craps’ model of Trauma Theory served as the framework, while the interpretive design&#13;
was used. Tanure Ojaide’s Songs of Myself: Quartet (SM), Sophia Obi’s Tears in a Basket&#13;
(TB), Albert Otto’s Letters from the Earth (LE), G’Ebinyo Ogbowei’s marsh boy &amp; other&#13;
poems (mb), Nnimmo Bassey’s I Will Not Dance To Your Beat (IWNDTYB) and Ibiwari&#13;
Ikiriko’s Oily Tears of the Delta (OTD) were purposively selected owing to the insignias of&#13;
trauma embedded in them. The texts were subjected to literary analysis.&#13;
Trauma and traumatogenic inscriptions are portrayed from the perspectives of triggers and&#13;
manifestations. The triggers are denoted through imprinted pain and sadness, anxiety and&#13;
grief (SM, TB, LE, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD), rage (SM, TB and mb), agitation and&#13;
frustration (OTD), and despair (LE). These triggers are manifest through psychic torture and&#13;
emotional distress at disconcerting memories (SM, TB, LE, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD),&#13;
depression (SM, TB, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD), delusion (SM, TB, LE, mb and OTD), and&#13;
illusions (TB, LE, mb and OTD). They are also depicted through suicide and suicidal&#13;
thoughts (mb and IWNDTYB), self-estrangement and loneliness (SM), feelings of&#13;
estrangement and insomnia (TB), mental confusion and violence (mb), amnesia&#13;
(IWNDTYB), psychic numbing and hallucination (OTD). Stylistically, enjambment and&#13;
apostrophe are predominantly used to emphasise the mental distress experienced by the poet&#13;
personas and, by extension, the Niger Delta populace (SM, TB, LE, mb, IWNDTYB and&#13;
OTD). The collections are also saturated with repetition to draw attention to grief (SM, TB,&#13;
LE, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD), intertextuality to depict the people’s contrasting conditions&#13;
and misery (SM and OTD), and rhetorical questions to emphasise pain (SM, TB, LE,&#13;
IWNDTYB and OTD). Metaphorical language and imagery are used to inscribe agonising&#13;
experiences and pains (SM, TB, LE, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD); while irony (TB and&#13;
IWNDTYB) and oxymoron (SM, TB, LE, mb, IWNDTYB and OTD) are used to stress the&#13;
contradictions that result in trauma. These tropes mimic the effects of trauma and bear out&#13;
its inscriptions. However, the series of traumatic experiences are presented in phenomenal&#13;
emotional language (SM, TB and LE) and steeped in resistance undertone (mb, IWNDTYB&#13;
and OTD).&#13;
Niger Delta eco-conscious poetry inscribes trauma as a stealthily ongoing disaster in the&#13;
region, and the trauma is catalysed by environmental degradation. Therefore, poetry is a&#13;
suitable medium for relating traumatic experiences in literary form.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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