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Uncompromising affirmation of culture: Soyinka’s death and the King’s Horseman

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Wole Soyinka’s Death and the King’s Horseman is the convergence of two issues: the first focuses on the Yoruba priest Elesin, who represents the embodiment of the mythology and the history of the people; the second concentrates on the “sterile, existential wasteland” (Ralph-Bowman, 1983) of the white colonialists. The two issues come into conflict in the sacrifice of Elesin’s European-educated son, Olunde, whose death represents a significant and uncompromising affirmation of Yoruba cultural tradition. The sacrifice of Olunde, though appears as metaphysical, is entirely secular and practical. He dies to preserve the safety of his community and his action can be appreciated as a form of martyrdom. Olunde’s sacrifice symbolizes an act that asserts the value of higher duty against both the internal threat of materialistic self-interest and the external threat of an imposed alien culture. | Uncompromising affirmation of culture: Soyinka’s death and the King’s Horseman