Discuss the significance of the Ona-Agbadi relationship in the novel.
The love affair between Ona and Nwokocha Agbadi opens Buchi Emecheta's The Joys of Motherhood and casts its shadow over the whole novel. Though it belongs to the older generation, this passionate, wilful relationship establishes the book's central concerns, produces its heroine, and sets in motion the fate that Nnu Ego will inherit.
It introduces the heroine and the plot. Nnu Ego, the central character, is the child of Ona and Agbadi. Their union is therefore the literal origin of the story. Nnu Ego's temperament, her pride and her lifelong struggle to prove herself as a mother, all descend from this beginning, so the relationship is the seed from which the plot grows.
It dramatises the theme of a woman's independence. Ona is a proud, spirited woman who refuses to become an ordinary wife. Bound by a promise to her father, Obi Umunna, who has no male heir, she will not marry Agbadi and insists on keeping her own will even as his mistress. Her fierce independence, and the tension it creates with Agbadi's masculine pride, introduces the novel's great question: what freedom can a woman have in a patriarchal society? Nnu Ego's later life answers this question tragically.
It exposes the conflict between love and male dominance. Agbadi is a wealthy, arrogant chief who loves Ona precisely because she resists him. Their relationship is a battle of wills, tender yet combative. His public display of lovemaking to humiliate a jealous wife, and Ona's refusal to be owned, reveal both the intensity and the cruelty in relations between men and women, another pattern the novel will trace through Nnu Ego's marriages.
It links the theme of childbearing and the chi. Ona's death after childbirth, and her dying wish that Agbadi allow their daughter to have a life of her own, connect directly to the novel's spiritual framework. Nnu Ego is said to be dogged by the chi of a slave woman wronged in Agbadi's household, and the guilt and passion surrounding Ona and Agbadi feed the sense of an inherited curse that will deny Nnu Ego lasting happiness.
It sets the standard of pride the novel questions. The strong, self-respecting Ona contrasts with the self-sacrificing Nnu Ego, inviting readers to weigh the cost of a woman's pride against the cost of a woman's devotion to motherhood.
Conclusion. The Ona-Agbadi relationship is significant because it generates the heroine, launches the plot, and announces the novel's abiding themes of female independence, the clash of love and male power, and the burden of childbearing. It is the source from which Nnu Ego's tragedy flows.