Things Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe
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Quote Bank: Spirituality and predetermination
Quote |
Character |
Chapter |
“And that was how he came to look after the doomed lad who was sacrificed to the village of Umuofia by their neighbours to avoid war and bloodshed. The ill-fated lad was called Ikemefuna.” |
Narrator |
1 |
“Perhaps down in his heart Okonkwo was not a cruel man. But his whole life was dominated by fear, the fear of failure and of weakness. It was deeper and more intimate than the fear of evil and capricious gods and of magic, the fear of the forest, and of nature, malevolent, red in tooth and claw.” |
Narrator |
2 |
“Unoka was an ill-fated man. He had a bad chi or personal god, and evil fortune followed him to the grave, or rather to his death, for he had no grave.” |
Narrator |
3 |
“Beware of exchanging words with Agbala. Does a man speak when a god speaks? Beware!” |
Priestess |
11 |
“If a man said yes his chi also affirmed” |
Narrator |
14 |
“Your gods are not alive and cannot do you any harm,” replied the white man. “They are pieces of wood and stone.” |
Missonary |
16 |
“To abandon the gods of one’s own father and go about with a lot of effeminate men clucking like old hens was the very depth of abomination.” |
Okonkwo |
17 |
“You can stay with us if you like our ways. You can worship your own god. It is good that a man should worship the gods and the spirits of his fathers.” |
Egwugwu |
22 |
“Okonkwo stood looking at the dead man. He knew that Umuofia would not go to war. He knew because they had let the other messengers escape. They had broken into tumult instead of action. He discerned fright in that tumult. He heard voices asking: ‘Why did he do it?” |
Narrator |
24 |
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Things Fall Apart
Sample Essay
Things Fall Apart follows the life of a man named Okonkwo, a prominent warrior and rising figure within his tribe of Umuofia, a part of the Igbo clan in what is now Nigeria. The son of a weak-willed and unsuccessful father, Okonkwo is the archetypal tribal strong-man keen to depart from his family’s failures. He is tough on his three wives and expects great things from his children, especially from his sons. The first part of the novel lulls the reader into the complexities and everyday going-on of tribal life; feasts, friendships, challenges, and celebrations come and go with the seasons, stitching together a rich tapestry of human life. Through the second part, Okonkwo is forced to leave his tribe due to a transgression of law and returns to the tribe of his late mother for refuge. As the story progresses, white colonialists make contact with surrounding tribes and stories of their actions spread. In the third and final part of the text, these colonialists clash with Umuofia and Okonkwo at the same time he returns. This shows the beginning of the end for the livelihood Okonkwo holds so dear as the very fabric of its society is changed through Christian missions and governmental structures, highlighting the inability for the two to coexist while one seeks to subjugate the other.
Things Fall Apart tackles numerous important historical themes relating to colo- nialism, modernism and Christian evangelism as well as deeply human themes of family, kinship, culture, identity, and gender roles. Notions of masculinity; its successes and its short comings, are explored in every way through Okonkwo and his treatment of women and how he raises his sons. His prominence in the tribe is closely linked to his control of his women, viewed as his possessions. Through his tendency for violence we see how he strains kinship ties, which are so essential in native Igbo culture, and Achebe explores how he undermines what makes his people strong in the face of danger. Achebe does not shy away from critiquing native culture and its sometimes cruel and unforgiving laws which leave many minority groups ostracised and marginalised. He also openly accepts the benefits Europeans had on these minority groups, by tackling the human desire for spiritual nourishment and how it feels to belong in a group of like-minded in- dividuals. Make no mistake however; Achebe’s criticism of colonialism comes through very clearly through the dichotomy of black versus white, and the de- meaning attitudes, violence, and subjugation of the latter towards the former.
Achebe makes excellent use of many literary techniques throughout the text such as intertextual allusion, foreshadowing, meta-narrative, and symbolism as he crafts a clean arc through Igbo history and story. It is crucial to pay close at- tention to how Achebe employs the traditional storytelling of Igbo culture with clever symbolic foreshadowing from the beginning of the text and identifying how it ‘pays-off’ at the story’s close.
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