Activism in Nigeria lives in a paradox. It is loud yet fragile, passionate yet inconsistent, courageous yet often unstructured. It rises in waves: brilliant, intense, and emotionally charged only to recede before it reshapes the shoreline. The phrase “a dilettantism for action” captures this tension: a civic culture where many flirt with activism, taste its aesthetics, speak its language, but rarely commit to its long-haul demands. This is not a condemnation of Nigerians. It is a reflection on the ecosystem that shapes their engagement. To understand the present, one must look at the long lineage of dilettantes across history, figures who embraced the performance of activism without embracing its discipline . Their stories illuminate Nigeria’s current moment and reveal what it takes to move from momentary action to sustained transformation. The Anatomy of a Dilettante A dilettante is not simply an amateur. A dilettante is someone who: Participates in activism as an emo...
Duel Thematic: A Sanctuary for Sanity, a Study of the Split Self, and a New Frontier in Accessible Game Design
Every human being carries two selves within them: the self that seeks order and the self that slips into disorder. Literature has long expressed this duality through figures like Jekyll and Hyde, but the emotional truth behind it is universal. We are all, at different moments, calm and chaotic, disciplined and impulsive, grounded and overwhelmed. Duel Thematic , a game within the Resona app, transforms this inner tension into a playable metaphor; one that is not only psychologically resonant but also radically accessible. The game began with a simple question: How can digital interactions be made easier for people who cannot drag and drop? Dragging is one of the most common gestures in modern interfaces, yet it remains one of the most exclusionary. Many people with disabilities: those using screen readers, speech recognition tools like Dragon or Voice Access, or those relying on keyboard navigation struggle with drag‑and‑drop mechanics. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG...