Additionally, when the cousins begin to sing through the rosary, the severe rules impacted on them by their father are stressed as Jaja’s …show more content…
At the very beginning of this extract the aunty informs them of the lack of restrictions saying ‘you can stay up as long as you want afterward to watch TV or whatever else’, depicting her laid back approach and choice that is given to nurturing her own children. This is further portrayed to the reader when Aunty Ifeoma describes their visit as a ‘holiday’, suggesting her care for them to enjoy their time and relax without the stress of a ‘schedule’ or routine which severely differs from their father’s intentions.
Furthermore, the author illustrates Kambili’s unfamiliarity of the Igbo customs when her cousin starts to sing in a ‘melodious voice’ after every decade and we are given a positive impression of Kambili’s narrative on the ‘uplifting’ Igbo songs, implying that the singing elevates her mood from repression. Through the simile: ‘like an opera singer drawing the words from the pit of her stomach’, Adichie emphasises the heartening essence of the Igbo traditions and freedom, illustrating them in an enriching way to stress the father’s conflicting