Femi Osofisan’s Evolving Global Consciousness in Four Adaptations

Femi Osofisan is one of contemporary theatre’s greatest adapters. His dramaturgy frequently intertwines European texts with Yoruba songs, dances, rituals, and other cultural elements to break down ostensible cultural barriers. This article interprets Osofisan’s career as a movement from domestic to international concerns, charting the evolution of his dramaturgical approach from his early to later works to demonstrate his expanding cosmopolitan and postcolonial engagements. I argue that four of his adaptations – Who’s Afraid of Solarin? (1978), Tegonni (1994), Wesoo, Hamlet! (2003), and Women of Owu (2004) – serve as an index of Osofisan’s artistic focus as it shifts from a concentration on Nigeria’s domestic problems to expressing a Nigerian perspective on global issues. The latter three plays rely on complex and dynamic intertextuality, reflecting a postmodern self-consciousness as Osofisan metatheatrically explores the processes of performance, theatre, and art through direct interplay between his own characters and those of his Greek or Shakespearean sources. This argument challenges accounts of Osofisan’s career that emphasize an exclusive interest in Nigeria’s domestic politics, arguing instead that his drama is involved in a longstanding project of intercultural adaptation as a means of addressing international political, economic, and security problems.

Final published version is available at https://doi.org/10.3138/md.64-4-1044

Files

Metadata

Work Title Femi Osofisan’s Evolving Global Consciousness in Four Adaptations
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Phillip Louis Zapkin
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Modern Drama
Publication Date December 2, 2021
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.3138/md.64-4-1044
Deposited June 30, 2025

Versions

Analytics

Collections

This resource is currently not in any collection.

Work History

Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Updated
  • Updated
  • Updated Publisher, Publisher Identifier (DOI), Description, and 2 more Show Changes
    Publisher
    • Modern Drama
    Publisher Identifier (DOI)
    • https://doi.org/10.3138/md.64-4-1044
    Description
    • Femi Osofisan is one of contemporary theatre’s greatest adapters. His dramaturgy frequently intertwines European texts with Yoruba songs, dances, rituals, and other cultural elements to break down ostensible cultural barriers. This article interprets Osofisan’s career as a movement from domestic to international concerns, charting the evolution of his dramaturgical approach from his early to later works to demonstrate his expanding cosmopolitan and postcolonial engagements. I argue that four of his adaptations – <i>Who’s Afraid of Solarin?</i> (1978), <i>Tegonni</i> (1994), <i>Wesoo, Hamlet!</i> (2003), and <i>Women of Owu</i> (2004) – serve as an index of Osofisan’s artistic focus as it shifts from a concentration on Nigeria’s domestic problems to expressing a Nigerian perspective on global issues. The latter three plays rely on complex and dynamic intertextuality, reflecting a postmodern self-consciousness as Osofisan metatheatrically explores the processes of performance, theatre, and art through direct interplay between his own characters and those of his Greek or Shakespearean sources. This argument challenges accounts of Osofisan’s career that emphasize an exclusive interest in Nigeria’s domestic politics, arguing instead that his drama is involved in a longstanding project of intercultural adaptation as a means of addressing international political, economic, and security problems.
    Publication Date
    • 2021-12-02
    Publisher's Statement
    • Final published version is available at https://doi.org/10.3138/md.64-4-1044
  • Added Creator Phillip Louis Zapkin
  • Added 1044_Zapkin3FA_PZ.docx
  • Updated License Show Changes
    License
    • https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
  • Published
  • Updated