African literature is full of examples of African women's plight in political and social change experienced after colonialism. Ama Aito Aidoo's short stories "Two Sisters" and "The Wedding on the Cross" explore their lives because the three women are ubiquitous colonialism rather than just a man of life. I examined it. Aidoo's "Two Sisters" Mercy and Connie women represent their strict social structure and some difficulties of male stress in their lives.
In the story "Two sisters", Idu proposed different aspects of the life of the two sisters. Connie is a sister of Messi, she is married and has traditional values. Compassion is unmarried and grows without looking after his father. The story begins when Mercy is ready to leave work and wonders if life has a simpler life if she has a "boyfriend" driving and working at home. At the same time, there is no choice other than public transport for compassion. As soon as she got home she accused her sister "her fingers died for typing" (Aidoo 995). Mercy asks herself if the typist is her only choice. Her other thought is to date older men to get what she wants because she is not satisfied with her life. When Conn notes that compassionate dating the old man, she does not agree with her sister's way. He can live a prosperous life if Cony tells her sister that he can date her taxi driver Joe and if his work can be completed successfully (Aidoo 996)
Ama Ata Aidoo's two sisters are about operation and control. Compassion and Connie are sisters. Mercy is unmarried, likes better ones in life and gets these things by date with older men. Connie is married and is against the arrangement between Mercy and Menser Arthur. This story raises the question of whether they have the right to use someone for the sole purpose of acquiring something, even if they use you. There is no problem with sympathy. She thinks "women can act in their own way, not grasp freedom", and Mercy explains how to solve this problem while dating young men (95) . Even if my sister gave her a gift from Mencer Arthur, Conney opposed that idea. For her it seems that he is using her, but as her husband James pointed out, "She is using herself, please remember" (99). She violated a considerate lifestyle and made her a hypocrite, but Connie accepted that gift.