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Water Fights Back in Lagos: A Performance Reading of Aqua-Terrestrial Futures in Ojo Bakare’s “Ekun Omi”

eTropic electronic journal of studies in the tropics 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Princewill Chukwuma Abakporo, Princewill Chukwuma Abakporo, Abdulmalik Adakole Amali, Fidelis Enang Egbe, Stanley Timeyin Ohenhen

Summary

This literary analysis examines Ojo Bakare's play about Lagos, Nigeria, through the lens of ecocriticism and the blue humanities, exploring water as both a victim of and agent responding to urbanization and ecological degradation. The work addresses themes of flooding, climate change, overpopulation, and the marginalization of Indigenous knowledge in relation to the city's aquatic systems. The study highlights how African theater can engage audiences in collective responsibility for environmental futures.

The Nigerian tropics is home to diverse ecosystems and rich cultural traditions. Taking up water as a material and symbolic force in relation to urbanisation, ecological deterioration, and colonial history, this work analyses Ojo Bakare's play “Ekun Omi” [When Water Cries] in a performative reading of Lagos' aqua-terrestrial futures. Through metaphor, the African theatre production examines the complex interaction between the city's aquatic systems and its human residents in light of flooding, climate change, overpopulation, and the socio-political marginalisation of Indigenous knowledge. Drawing on ecocriticism and the blue humanities, this paper takes a multifaceted approach to understanding water as a victim and agent of ecological retribution. It highlights the transformative power of Bakare’s work in depicting the ecological crisis in Lagos, while engaging the audience in collective responsibility for the future. “Ekun Omi” provides a critical and speculative analysis of Lagos' trajectory, showcasing how any viable future for the city must acknowledge the intricate bond between humans and the natural world—especially watery domains.

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