On the other side, the author tends toward the ultimate womanist ideal of union and survival for man, woman, and kid. Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie echoes womanist longing as well. Adichie's work clearly tends to resist and usurp patriarchy, as seen by the novel's analysis. The findings of this study are based on a careful reading of the text, with an emphasis on literary elements including characterization, narrative approach, tone, mood, and setting. The experiment's purpose was to examine if this female author's womanist ideas persisted. Through thorough examination, a womanist reading of this novel aims to find the many and related ways this female author articulates and demonstrates womanist ideology in the above-mentioned work. The work of Chimamanda Adichie, a Nigerian female writer and author of Purple Hibiscus, is examined using Ogunyemi's womanist philosophy. Womanism, as a subset of African feminism, provides a framework for assessing the works of African female authors critically.
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