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Things Fall Apart
Things Fall Apart
Plot Analysis:
The book Things Fall Apart tells us about the tragedy in the life of
Okonkwo and the reality of the Igbo traditions which the white men
destroyed.
In the beginning of the story, Okonkwo is widely known and respected as a
wealthy farmer, a man of titles with three wives, and a fearless warrior.
After killing the Amalinze Cat, he acquired two titles (honorary titles that
give a man status in the tribe). Okonkwo has overcome incredible
diversity. His father's pathetic end and death tainted him with shame, and
left him without inheritance. His rise to social power and wealth has been
a triumph of stubbornness and will. Sharecropping is a difficult way to
begin; moreover, the first year Okonkwo planted was a terrible harvest
year. But Okonkwo was young and strong, and he was able to survive. The
experience has been essential to the formation of his character. He is
confident that he can master his environment; he rules as a man, and he
is fiercely proud of his people. Afraid of being like his father who is a
laughing stock in the community, and whom he sees as being effeminate
and weak. Okonkwo even joins in the group murder of his adoptive son,
Ikemefuna, out of fear of seeming weak and cowardly. His behavior causes
him huge internal guilt and also alienates him from his son, Nwoye.
Masculinity is one of Okonkwo's obsessions. He sees any tender emotion
as feminine and therefore weak. Okonkwo carries the preoccupation with
manliness to an extreme. He has not learned restraint. His beating of
Ojiugo is the first concrete incident in the book during which we watch
Okonkwo lose control. Although he begins the beating having forgotten
that it is the Week of Peace, when reminded he does not stop. He is not a
man to do anything half-way, even if he knows there are consequences.
Later, this hubris destroys him. His neighbors notice his pride. Even when
Okonkwo feels penitent, he takes great pains to hide it. This drive and
fierce pride have made him a great man, but they are also the source of
all of his faults.
The second part begins with Okonkwos exile to his mothers land for
seven years. This part also marks the entry of the white man into the lives
of the African people. Though inwardly disappointed, Okonkwo begins a
new life with his family on his uncles bounty, dreaming and planning for
the day when he would return to his own land. In these seven years, he
hears of the destruction of the village of Abame by the white men because
the natives there had killed a white man. This part also introduces the
missionaries into the lives of the people with particular reference to their
interest of converting people into their religion. Finally, there is the
farewell feast that Okonkwo arranges for the whole village before he
returns to his own village after his seven years of exile.
The third part deals with Okonkwos return to his village and his
disappointment at the lack of interest in his arrival. Many things have
changed during these seven years. The village has virtually fallen apart
with the entry of the white men who have brought about a lot of changes
in the village. They have brought in a new government and many villagers
have converted to the new religion, including Nwoye, Okonkwos son.
Trade has also been established. The last two chapters deal with the
terrible treatment meted out to the leaders of the tribe by the District
Commissioner. His actions impel Okonkwo to behead one of their
messengers and after finding that his action has no support from the tribe,
Okonkwo is compelled to take his own life. Even at this last stage of his
life, his fellow clan members do not bury him since he has desecrated the
land of the Goddess Ani, by taking his own life.
The novel ends on a note of irony as the point of view shifts to the District
Commissioners who sees the situation only in terms of his own ambitions
and ruthless need to subjugate the native populace. The tragedy of
Okonkwo will just be a paragraph in the book of the District Commissioner,
called The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger.
Character Analysis:
The protagonist of Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo is also considered a tragic
hero. A tragic hero holds a position of power and prestige, chooses his
course of action, possesses a tragic flaw, and gains awareness of
circumstances that lead to his fall. Okonkwo's tragic flaw is his fear of
weakness and failure.
In his thirties, Okonkwo is a leader of the Igbo community of Umuofia.
Achebe describes him as "tall and huge" with "bushy eyebrows and [a]
wide nose [that gives] him a very severe look." When Okonkwo walks, his
heels barely touch the ground, like he walks on springs, "as if he [is] going
to pounce on somebody." Okonkwo "stammers slightly" and his breathing
is heavy.
Okonkwo is renowned as a wrestler, a fierce warrior, and a successful
farmer of yams (a "manly" crop). He has three wives and many children
who live in huts on his compound. Throughout his life, he wages a never
ending battle for status; his life is dominated by the fear of weakness and
failure. He is quick to anger, especially when dealing with men who are
weak, lazy debtors like his father. However, Okonkwo overcompensates for
his father's womanly (weak) ways, of which he is ashamed, because he
does not tolerate idleness or gentleness. Even though he feels inward
affection at times, he never portrays affection toward anyone. Instead, he
isolates himself by exhibiting anger through violent, stubborn, irrational
behavior. Okonkwo demands that his family work long hours despite their
age or limited physical stamina, and he nags and beats his wives and son,
Nwoye, who Okonkwo believes is womanly like his father, Unoka.
Okonkwo is impulsive; he acts before he thinks. Consequently, Okonkwo
offends the Igbo people and their traditions as well as the gods of his clan.
Okonkwo is advised not to participate in the murder of Ikefemuna, but he
actually kills Ikefemuna because he is "afraid of being thought weak."
When the white man brings Christianity to Umuofia, Okonkwo is opposed
to the new ways. He feels that the changes are destroying the Igbo
culture, changes that require compromise and accommodation two
qualities that Okonkwo finds intolerable. Too proud and inflexible, he clings
to traditional beliefs and mourns the loss of the past.
When Okonkwa rashly kills a messenger from the British district office, his
clansmen back away in fear; he realizes that none of them support him
and that he can't save his village from the British colonists. Okonkwo is
defeated. He commits suicide, a shameful and disgraceful death like his
father's.
Unoka
A tall, thin man with a slight stoop, Unoka was Okonkwo's father. He
appeared "haggard and mournful . . . except when he was drinking or
playing his flute." His favorite time of year was after the harvest when he
joined with village musicians to make music and feast; Unoka's priority
was to enjoy life to the fullest. An excellent flutist, he was happy and
peaceful when he was playing his flute, in spite of the sorrow and grief
that was evident in his music.
Unoka lacked responsibility. He was poor, lazy, and neglectful of his wife,
and he did not plan for the future. During his life, he never took a title
and, therefore, never gained status or respect from the villagers. Instead,
they called him a loafer, and he was the laughingstock of the community.
Whenever he managed to get his hands on money, "he immediately
bought gourds of palm-wine." Unoka was a debtor and a failure. Also a
coward, he never became a warrior wars made him unhappy because
he couldn't stand the sight of blood. Unoka's behavior was contrary to
typical Igbo tradition, so he was not taken seriously and was treated in a
demeaning manner by Igbo clansmen and, later, by Okonkwo, his son.
away with the traditional government of the Igbo people and instate their
own form of government. Mr. Brown informs the Igbo people that they will
need to adapt so they will not lose all their autonomy and their
traditional beliefs.
Reverend Smith
Reverend Smith is a missionary who replaces Mr. Brown as the new head
of the Christian church. Reverend Smith is strict and uncompromising, the
opposite of Mr. Brown who was kind, compassionate, and accommodating.
Reverend Smith is a stereotypical fire-and-brimstone preacher: "He [sees]
things as black and white. And black [is] evil." He is intolerant and
disrespectful of Igbo beliefs and customs and likens Igbo religion to the
pagan prophets of Baal of the Old Testament; he considers their beliefs to
be the work of the devil. Reverend Smith demands that Igbo clansmen
who convert to Christianity reject all indigenous beliefs. He is determined
to follow a strict interpretation of the scriptures. Mr. Smith demonstrates
his intolerance of Igbo beliefs when he suspends a woman convert from
the Christian church who followed traditional custom regarding her dead
ogbanje child.
Because Reverend Smith expects converts to adhere to all Christian
scripture and dogma in a very narrow-minded manner, he incites converts
to become overzealous, even fanatical, about their newfound belief. After
Enoch, a zealous convert, creates a conflict during an Igbo ceremony, the
egwugwu, or ancestral spirits of the clan, burn Enoch's compound and
then proceed to the church compound. Reverend Smith, who has no idea
why the egwugwu are upset (nor does he care), is unharmed only because
of Mr. Brown's preceding compassion toward the Igbo people and his
understanding of their beliefs. The egwugwu destroy Reverend Smith's
church.
Setting:
The physical setting of forest the forest villages are extremely important.
The Umuofia clan has an elaborate religious system largely based on their
natural environment. Surrounded by dense, dark woods, the forest is both
respected and feared as a chief god, the Evil Forest. The earth goddess is
also revered and feared; as farmers, the Umuofia rely completely on the
produce of the land and are subject to drought and flooding. The earth
goddess is seen as in control of the weather and productivity of the land,
so much of the clans social structure is set around not displeasing the
earth goddess. Fear of offending the earth goddess motivates the
punishment for many crimes, such as Okonkwos seven-year exile for
killing a clansman. Achebes descriptions of the isolation of the Umuofia
people and their complete dependence on their natural setting make their
culture and practices understandable to a Western audience.
Point of View
Third person omniscient
Though most of the novel is focused on Okonkwo, the narrator generally
provides insight into the thoughts of most characters. There are times
when the narration is focused around different characters namely
Ikemefuna, Nwoye, Obierika, and Ekwefi. The multiplicity of voices allows
the reader to see different characters through a variety of lenses. Access
to the internal thoughts of a variety of characters also gives
dimensionality to the Igbo people as a whole Achebe never lets the
reader assume that the Igbo people are homogenous and could be
summed up in one single character.
Theme:
Tribal belief - Particularly since one of the threats to Igbo life is the
coming of the new religion, tribal belief is a theme of some
importance. Igbo religious beliefs explain and provide meaning to
the world; the religion is also inextricable from social and political
institutions. Achebe also shows that Igbo religious authorities, such
as the Oracle, seem to possess uncanny insights. He approaches the
matter of Igbo religion with a sense of wonder.
Symbol:
Locusts
Achebe depicts the locusts that descend upon the village in highly
allegorical terms that prefigure the arrival of the white settlers, who will
feast on and exploit the resources of the Igbo. The fact that the Igbo eat
these locusts highlights how innocuous they take them to be. Similarly,
those who convert to Christianity fail to realize the damage that the
culture of the colonizer does to the culture of the colonized.
The language that Achebe uses to describe the locusts indicates their
symbolic status. The repetition of words like settled and every
emphasizes the suddenly ubiquitous presence of these insects and hints
at the way in which the arrival of the white settlers takes the Igbo off
guard. Furthermore, the locusts are so heavy they break the tree
branches, which symbolizes the fracturing of Igbo traditions and culture
under the onslaught of colonialism and white settlement. Perhaps the
most explicit clue that the locusts symbolize the colonists is Obierikas
comment in Chapter 15: the Oracle . . . said that other white men were
on their way. They were locusts. . . .
Fire
Okonkwo is associated with burning, fire, and flame throughout the novel,
alluding to his intense and dangerous angerthe only emotion that he
allows himself to display. Yet the problem with fire, as Okonkwo
acknowledges in Chapters 17 and 24, is that it destroys everything it
consumes. Okonkwo is both physically destructivehe kills Ikemefuna and
Ogbuefi Ezeudus sonand emotionally destructivehe suppresses his
fondness for Ikemefuna and Ezinma in favor of a colder, more masculine
aura. Just as fire feeds on itself until all that is left is a pile of ash,
Okonkwo eventually succumbs to his intense rage, allowing it to rule his
actions until it destroys him.
Yams
Pascual, Eunice L.
BSE 2A
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