The literary field of Buchi Emecheta is a domestic experience of female characters, and these roles are a way to make it consistent with the classes of secondary classes and slavery that have suffered from the couple or male tradition. Buchi Emecheta says that novels, especially women's writing, play a role in creating a world that women can live in freely, women have freedom, creativity, self expression, friendship and love.
Buchi Emecheta was one of the first African female novelists to tackle their struggle issues for female status, self-actualization and liberation. Her novel "Motherhood of Motherhood" is exploring the positive and negative impacts modernization has on women and their imprisonment between tradition and change. Through the story of the hero's Nnu Ego, she also shows how to distinguish the second ranked place of women, children's producers, and social pyramids, where strict traditions are considered male assets It is.
Buchi Emecheta's "pleasure of women" and Tsitsi Dangarembga's tension has reduced the status of women. Since the Victorian era, the decline of the status of women has become an impediment to the development of society. A considerable number of authors wrote various novels depicting this tragic situation such as "female pleasure" by Buchi Emecheta and "neuropathy" by Tsitsi Dangarembga. Choosing to compare these two novels gets a good approach and their hero encounters the same problem despite many differences.
Neither Chinua Achebe nor Buchi Emecheta shows that modernization can not be imposed on a group of people; it should be a natural process. Ibos is a very proud and socially complex person. At the beginning of two novels, the author depicts the many complexities of the Ibo culture and the way they become successful people with rich habits. The British had excellent weapons and came to Nigeria as we were able to force their lives to many people in the country. The colonialists established their own judicial system in Nigeria and burdened indigenous peoples with their laws. It is (Achebe 178). They changed many of the deeper values of the Nigerian: "Think about a quiet and cowardly woman after his (Abaddi) time with Christianity and other changes" (Emecheta 10)