{"title":"Eco-Drama, Multinational Corporations, and Climate Change in Nigeria","authors":"R. C. Amaefula","doi":"10.1515/jcde-2022-0012","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Oil explorations by multinational corporations in Nigeria have grave consequences on the ecosystem. Gas flaring, oil spillage, and other forms of land and water pollution seriously degrade the natural environment as well as displace Nigerians from their homes and traditional occupations. Pollution has caused increased flooding, erosion, and dearth of both food and fishes, leading to poverty and hidden hunger, among other problems. More destructive is the reactionary disposition of the Nigerian state to climate change and ecological disasters. Beside the provision of make-shift structures and relief materials to flood victims, there are hardly any proactive efforts on the ground to check the activities of multinational corporations operating in the country. Greg Mbajiorgu’s eco-drama Wake Up Everyone (2011) depicts the challenges of the climate crisis in contemporary Nigeria. A close reading and critical analysis of the play, which is a microcosm of the country, illuminates the ways these challenges affect Nigerians and the need for action. Apart from displacing individuals from their homes, flooding takes a heavy toll on the agricultural sector, as most crops and livestock production systems in Nigeria are not yet fully technology-based and are, therefore, susceptible to environmental degradation. As a result, the flooding of farms and plantations, damaging crops and seedlings, leads to a corresponding degree of food scarcity/insecurity and indeed inflation in the cost of farm produce. This paper concludes that conscious efforts suggested in the play should be made to forestall multinational corporations from further pillaging the environment, and that government functionaries saddled with the task of forging active measures to stem the effects of climate change in the country should rise to their responsibilities.","PeriodicalId":41187,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Contemporary Drama in English","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Contemporary Drama in English","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/jcde-2022-0012","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract Oil explorations by multinational corporations in Nigeria have grave consequences on the ecosystem. Gas flaring, oil spillage, and other forms of land and water pollution seriously degrade the natural environment as well as displace Nigerians from their homes and traditional occupations. Pollution has caused increased flooding, erosion, and dearth of both food and fishes, leading to poverty and hidden hunger, among other problems. More destructive is the reactionary disposition of the Nigerian state to climate change and ecological disasters. Beside the provision of make-shift structures and relief materials to flood victims, there are hardly any proactive efforts on the ground to check the activities of multinational corporations operating in the country. Greg Mbajiorgu’s eco-drama Wake Up Everyone (2011) depicts the challenges of the climate crisis in contemporary Nigeria. A close reading and critical analysis of the play, which is a microcosm of the country, illuminates the ways these challenges affect Nigerians and the need for action. Apart from displacing individuals from their homes, flooding takes a heavy toll on the agricultural sector, as most crops and livestock production systems in Nigeria are not yet fully technology-based and are, therefore, susceptible to environmental degradation. As a result, the flooding of farms and plantations, damaging crops and seedlings, leads to a corresponding degree of food scarcity/insecurity and indeed inflation in the cost of farm produce. This paper concludes that conscious efforts suggested in the play should be made to forestall multinational corporations from further pillaging the environment, and that government functionaries saddled with the task of forging active measures to stem the effects of climate change in the country should rise to their responsibilities.
跨国公司在尼日利亚的石油勘探对当地生态系统造成了严重的影响。天然气燃烧、石油泄漏以及其他形式的土地和水污染严重破坏了自然环境,并使尼日利亚人流离失所,离开家园和传统职业。污染导致洪水、水土流失加剧,粮食和鱼类短缺,导致贫困和隐性饥饿等问题。更具破坏性的是尼日利亚政府对气候变化和生态灾害的反动态度。除了向水灾受害者提供临时建筑和救济物资外,几乎没有任何积极的实地努力来检查在该国经营的跨国公司的活动。Greg Mbajiorgu的生态剧《Wake Up Everyone》(2011)描绘了当代尼日利亚气候危机的挑战。这部剧是尼日利亚的一个缩影,通过对它的仔细阅读和批判性分析,可以看出这些挑战是如何影响尼日利亚人的,以及采取行动的必要性。除了使个人流离失所之外,洪水还对农业部门造成了沉重打击,因为尼日利亚的大多数作物和牲畜生产系统尚未完全以技术为基础,因此容易受到环境退化的影响。因此,农场和种植园被洪水淹没,作物和幼苗遭到破坏,导致相应程度的粮食短缺/不安全,实际上导致农产品成本的通货膨胀。本文的结论是,剧中提出的有意识的努力应该阻止跨国公司进一步掠夺环境,而肩负着制定积极措施以遏制该国气候变化影响的任务的政府官员应该承担起他们的责任。