Eyoh Etim is the MD/CEO of Planeyo Publishers. e-mail: planeyopublishers@gmail.com Phone: +2348027898705

Category: Journal

  • Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH) Vol. 2, NO. 4, 2025

    Original price was: ₦11,000.00.Current price is: ₦10,000.00.

    It is with joy exceeding that I write the Editorial Notes for the Fourth Issue of Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH) in 2025. In this edition, which is the Volume 2, Number 4, of the journal, we have seven papers spread across the humanistic disciplines such as Literature and Criticism, Religious Studies, Language, Orature/Performance, as well as Book Reviews.The papers published in this volume are a timely response to the realities confronting our common humanity in the 21st century. For instance, responding to the migration challenges faced by Africans in contemporary time, Ndubuisi Martins writes on ‘Poetry as Migration: Orbiting through Nigeria and America in Segun Adekoya’s Here and There’. The continuous quest to decolonise Africa and its institutions informs the paper by Promise Akpan, Godwin Ekene and Patrick Archibong entitled ‘Ibritam: A Court of Appeal in Precolonial Igboland’, while a paper coauthored by Peter Tavershima Kumaga, Isaac Ngobua and Ngule Joseph titled ‘TIV Alliance and Individualistic Society: A Critical Analysis’ quests to arm the reader with precolonial knowledge for confronting contemporary sociopolitical challenges. Eyoh Etim’s paper is entitled ‘A Postcolonial Semiotic Reading of Selected Poems in Martin Akpan’s Ripples of Rebirth’, which constitutes Akwa Ibom Indigenous Literature together with Isonguyo Akpan’s Paper entitled ‘Orality, Ibibio Cultural Epistemology and Aesthetics of Exploring Sociopolitical Imaginaries in Selected Songs of Prophet Ubokudom’. There two papers in the volume that constitute book reviews. Uman Uman Ita writes a review on Eyoh Etim’s latest poetry collection, The Groans of Two Seven Nine, while Stephen Edem writes a review on Daniel Inyang’s drama text, Audacious. All the papers published in this edition went through double blind peer review process as stipulated in the Journal’s policy statements. I am grateful to all the reviewers and editors for their selfless service, especially in their timely and thorough reviews and reportage. I am most grateful to the NLNG whose support has made it possible for the papers in this edition to be published without Open Access Publication Charges (OAPC). Because academics in the 21st century rely on Open Access publication to achieve visibility and citation for their works, the support of the NLNG for the journal is laudable as it has relieved academics the burden of paying for their publications. I want to most sincerely thank the entire membership of the journal’s Editorial Board for their hard work, patience and commitment, which have seen to the stable development of the journal thus far. I invite the readers to dive into the content of the journal with excitement as the authors are adept at their work.

    Romanus Aboh, PhD

    Professor of English and African Studies,

    University of Calabar,

    Editor-in-Chief, PLANJAH.

    September, 2025.

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  • Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH) Volume 2 Number 2

    Original price was: ₦11,000.00.Current price is: ₦10,000.00.

    Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH) Volume 2 Number 2 comprises eight well-researched papers authored by seasoned scholars and spread across the arts and humanities subject area spectrum, including Literature, Language, Philosophy and Theatre Arts.

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  • Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH). Special Edition: Akwa Ibom Indigenous Literature, 2025

    Original price was: ₦11,000.00.Current price is: ₦10,000.00.

    Notes from the Editor-in-Chief

    The 21st century is the age of the minorities. It is also the time when power moves away from the centres to the peripheral spaces. It is the age of the underdogs, when we remember the forgotten, lift up the downtrodden and centralise the stories of the unheard. This epochal shift has been witnessed on major philosophical and literary fronts. For instance, minority peoples across the world have been recognised and given their pride of place in history and literature. This has been the case with Akwa Ibom Indigenous Literature which forms the focus of this special edition.

    Akwa Ibom State was created on the 23rd of September, 1987, from old Cross River State. It is a land rich with human and natural resources. The human resources in Akwa Ibom State have excelled in all fields of human endeavour, including literature. Yet there is more to aspire to and to hope for. This collection of scholarly articles is a celebration of the Akwa Ibom achievement in literature and criticism. It is time for the world to know and learn our literature.

    By way of definition, Akwa Ibom indigenous literature refers to the literature of Akwa Ibom peoples, referring to the Ibibio, Annang, Oro and Efik. Akwa Ibom indigenous literature is mostly authored by authors from Akwa Ibom State and does include non-Akwa Ibom authors as long as their works express the Akwa Ibom cultural sensibilities. Akwa Ibom indigenous literature also accounts for the literature of the Akwa-Cross region, known to share the same cultural ethos.

    Though great works have been produced in these spaces, these works have been greeted with little or no critical attention. Thus, the birthing of Akwa Ibom indigenous literature is highly commendable. Special thanks to Dr Eyoh Etim, the Founder and Managing Editor of Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH), for the vision of this special edition which will do a lot to preserve the literature of Akwa Ibom peoples. I thank all the editors and reviewers who saw to the elegance of the papers published in this volume. The NLNG deserves great praise for supporting PLANJAH and Planeyo Publishers to produce these papers without charging the authors Open Access Publication fees. The Special Edition is planned to be yearly and dedicated to the enrichment of our literature and culture. This edition is published in honour of Late Professor Ime Ikiddeh who, in his lifetime, dedicated his life to the improvement of Akwa Ibom Indigenous Literature, seen especially in the publication of his poetry collection, The Vulture’s Funeral and Reincarnation, which Eyoh Etim has studied in his paper also published in the journal.

    To the readers, I ask you to read the offering in this scholarly anthology with ease that is punctuated with thoughtfulness.

    Romanus Aboh, PhD

    Professor of English and African Studies,

    University of Calabar,

    Editor-in-Chief, PLANJAH.

    September, 2025.

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  • Planjah Volume 2, Number 3, June, 2025

    Original price was: ₦11,000.00.Current price is: ₦10,000.00.

    Notes from the Editor-in-Chief

    I am thrilled to write this brief for the Third Issue of Planeyo Journal of Arts and Humanities (PLANJAH) in 2025. In this edition, which is the Volume 2, Number 3, of the journal, we have eight papers spread across the humanistic disciplines such as Literature and Criticism, Philosophy, Language, History and Theatre Arts.

    Of the eight papers, three form a body of works on Akwa Ibom indigenous literature. These papers are authored by Eyoh Etim, Ekikereobong Aniekan Usoro and Imikan Nkopuruk. Eyoh Etim writes on ‘Poetry as Social Signification in Ime Ikiddeh’s The Vulture’s Funeral and Reincarnation’, Ekikereobong Usoro writes on ‘Arnold Udoka and the Non-polar Gender Approach to Niger Delta Postcolonial Ecocritical Problems’, while Imikan Nkopuruk’s paper is on ‘Context, Pragmatic Acts and Educational Implicatures in Annang Proverbs in Selected Songs of Uko Akpan’. I believe that the publication of these papers will contribute significantly to the existence of secondary data sources for the future critiquing of Akwa Ibom indigenous literature. The rest of the five papers are authored by scholars spread across the fields in the Humanities. For instance, Mopelola Rachael Olayiwola has a paper on Literature and Gender Studies entitled ‘Subversion of Marginality in Gendered Role Representation in Goretti Kyomuhendo’s Secret No More and Moses Isegawa’s Abyssinia Chronicles’. Kehinde Oyetimi’s paper is based in Literature and is entitled, ‘Allegory of Leprosy and the Metaphor of Isolation in Ngugi wa Thiong’O’s Petals of Blood’. Given that Ngugi wa Thiong’O passed away recently, this paper allows us to reflect on the greatness of Ngugi and the legacy he has bequeathed the literary landscape. Oluwaseyi Paul Adebile has a paper in History and International Relations, ‘Mirroring the Present from the Past: Diplomatic Reflections on Totalitarian Challenge in Twentieth-century Europe’, while a paper in Religious and Cultural Studies authored by Peter Tavershima Kumaga et al is entitled, ‘Religion and African Identity in a Globalised World’.

    All the papers published in this edition went through double blind peer review process as stipulated in the Journal’s policy statements. I am grateful to all the reviewers and editors for their selfless service, especially in their timely and thorough reviews and reportage.

    I am most grateful to the NLNG whose support has made it possible for the papers in this edition to be published without Open Access Publication Charges (OAPC). Because academics in the 21st century rely on Open Access publication to achieve visibility and citation for their works, the support of the NLNG for the journal is laudable as it has relieved academics the burden of paying for their publications.

    I want to most sincerely thank the entire membership of the journal’s Editorial Board for their hard work, patience and commitment, which have seen to the stable development of the journal thus far. I invite the readers to dive into the content of the journal with excitement as the authors are adept at their work.

    Prof. Romanus (Rome) Aboh,

    Professor of English and African Studies,

    University of Calabar,

    Editor-in-Chief, PLANJAH.

    June, 2025.

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  • Utuenikang: Ibom Journal of Language and Literary Review Vol 2

    Original price was: ₦7,000.00.Current price is: ₦6,500.00.

    This is the second volume of Utuenikang: Ibom Journal of Language and Literary Review. The volume is dedicated to the proceedings and presentations at the Ist Ibom International Conference on African Literature and the English Language, which held in April 2023, at Obio Akpa Campus of Akwa Ibom State University, Nigeria, and hosted by the Department of English of the University. The theme of the conference was ‘African Literature, the English Language and Contemporary Socio-political Issues’.

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