Introduction of Things Fall Apart
Introduction of Things Fall Apart
Introduction of Things Fall Apart
The novel takes its title from a verse in the poem "The Second
Coming" by W. B. Yeats, an Irish poet, essayist, and dramatist:
Literary Purpose
When Things Fall Apart was first published, Achebe announced that
one of his purposes was to present a complex, dynamic society to a
Western audience who perceived African society as primitive,
simple, and backward. Unless Africans could tell their side of their
story, Achebe believed that the African experience would forever be
"mistold," even by such well-meaning authors as Joyce Cary in
Mister Johnson. Cary worked in Nigeria as a colonial administrator
and was sympathetic to the Nigerian people. Yet Achebe feels that
Cary, along with other Western writers such as Joseph Conrad,
misunderstood Africa. Many European writers have presented the
continent as a dark place inhabited by people with impenetrable,
primitive minds; Achebe considers this reductionist portrayal of
Africa racist. He points to Conrad, who wrote against imperialism
but reduced Africans to mysterious, animalistic, and exotic "others."
In an interview published in 1994, Achebe explains that his anger
about the inaccurate portrayal of African culture by white colonial
writers does not imply that students should not read works by
Conrad or Cary. On the contrary, Achebe urges students to read
such works in order to better understand the racism of the colonial
era.
to help my society regain belief in itself and put away the complexes
of the years of denigration and self-abasement. . . . I would be quite
satisfied if my novels . . . did no more than teach my [African]
readers that their past with all its imperfections was not one
But readers should note that Achebe is not presenting Igbo culture
as faultless and idyllic. Indeed, Achebe would contest such a
romantic portrayal of his native people. In fact, many Western
writers who wrote about colonialism (including Joseph Conrad,
George Orwell, Herman Melville, and Graham Greene) were opposed
Note: Throughout this novel, Achebe uses the spelling Ibo, the old
spelling of the Umuofian community. Throughout the CliffsNotes, as
well as on the map, the contemporary spelling Igbo is used.
The history of Nigeria is bound up with its geography. About onethird larger than the state of Texas, Nigeria is located above the
inner curve of the elbow on the west coast of Africa, just north of
the equator and south of the Sahara Desert. More than two hundred
ethnic groups each with its own language, beliefs, and culture
live in present-day Nigeria. The largest ethnic groups are the mostly
Protestant Yoruba in the west, the Catholic Igbo in the east, and the
predominantly Muslim Hausa-Fulani in the north. This diversity of
peoples is the result of thousands of years of history; as traders,
nomads, and refugees from invaders and climatic changes came to
settle with the indigenous population, and as foreign nations
became aware of the area's resources.
The events in Things Fall Apart take place at the end of the
nineteenth century and in the early part of the twentieth century.
Although the British did not occupy most of Nigeria until 1904, they
had a strong presence in West Africa since the early nineteenth
century. The British were a major buyer of African slaves in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
With the British long gone from Nigeria, corruption and a lack of
leadership continued to hamper Nigeria's quest for true democracy.
A series of military coups and dictatorships in the 1970s, 1980s, and
early 1990s replaced the fragile democracy that Nigeria enjoyed in
the early 1960s. In 1993, Nigeria held a democratic presidential
election, which was followed by yet another bloodless coup. And so
continues the political pattern for the troubled, violent, most
populous country in Africa.Chapter 1
Summary:
Analysis:
Chapter 2
Summary:
One night as Okonkwo prepares for bed, he hears the town crier,
beating on his hollow instrument and calling all the men of Umuofia
to a meeting early tomorrow morning. The night is dark and
moonless, and the narrator explains that darkness was frightening
even for the bravest of the Igbo. The forest is a sinister place at
night. Okonkwo suspects that a war might be brewing: he's a
distinguished warrior, and war gives him a chance to win greater
esteem.
The next morning, the ten thousand men of Umuofia gather in the
marketplace. Ogbuefi Ezuogo, a powerful orator, gives the
traditional opening: he faces four different directions, raising a
clenched fist, and cries "Umuofia kwenu," to which the men all cry
"Yaa!" He greets them this way a fifth time, and then he tells them
that men from the neighboring village of Mbaino have killed a girl
from Umuofia. The men discuss the situation, and decide to follow
the normal course of action: the will issue an ultimatum, demanding
Analysis:
prizes justice, and does not wage wars of conquest. There is also a
high level of social mobility. Note that while Unoka was a failure,
Okonkwo has risen to become a great man among his people.
Okonkwo fears failure. The theme of ambition has its converse, and
it is Okonkwo's fear of failure that makes him a harsh man. He is
strong, but he fails to see that his wives and children are not as
physically strong as he. Yet he drives them to work as hard as he
does. All of his wives and children fear him. Okonkwo tries to help
his son, Nwoye, by being doubly harsh on him. But this approach is
turning Nwoye into a sad and resentful youth.
Chapter 3
Summary:
When Okonkwo was young, his father Unoka went to Agbala, the
Oracle of the Hills and the Caves. He asked why he always had a
miserable harvest, despite his prayers and offerings to the gods.
The Oracle told him that the fault lay not in the gods, but in his
laziness. Unoka died of swelling that the Igbo believe is an
abomination to the earth goddess. Like others who died badly, he
was left in the Evil Forest. Okonkwo lives in fear of the kind of
failure and sad end that met his father.
Okonkwo did not inherit a barn full of seed yams. He had to start
out as a sharecropper for a rich man named Nwakibie. Nwakibie was
generous, but the first year Okonkwo planted was the worst
planting year in Umuofia's living memory. Okonkwo, with
superhuman determination, survived. His father was in his last days
then. He gave Okonkwo encouraging praise, but it only tried
Okonkwo's patience.
Analysis:
Chapter 4
Summary:
Ikemefuna and Nwoye have become very close; Nwoye loves the
older boy, who is now like a brother to him. Ikemefuna has an
endless supply of folktales, and hearing them makes Nwoye see the
world in a new light.
Analysis:
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.
In his sincere desire to see his son Nwoye become great, he has
made the boy extremely unhappy. Okonkwo is not exactly a typical
Igbo male: though Achebe sets up Okonkwo's fall as parallel to the
fall of his people, he also shows us that Okonkwo is an
extraordinary man among the Igbo, in ways both good and bad. In
other men of the village, we see restraint and humility. We see in
Ikemefuna a role model that Nwoye has lacked. Fearful of his brutal
father, Nwoye now has a kind older brother to look up to. We also
see that Nwoye is a thoughtful boy: his responses to Ikemefuna's
folktales are imaginative and beautiful.
Chapter 5
Summary:
Okonkwo, like all rich men, always invites a huge number of guests
for the feast. But he himself is rather impatient with holidays, and
would prefer to be working on his farm. Preparation for the festival
makes him testy. Three days before the festival, he becomes furious
when he sees that a few leaves have been cut from the banana tree
(banana leaves are used to wrap food in many tropical countries).
When his second wife admits to the act, he beats her brutally. He
then decides to go hunting. Though a great man, Okonkwo is not a
great hunter. The wife who was just beaten makes a snide comment
about guns that never shoot, and he tries to shoot her. He misses.
Despite these disturbances, the festival is celebrated happily.
The second day of the new year is the day for wrestling. Ekwefi,
Okonkwo's second wife, loves the wrestling matches. It was
watching Okonkwo defeat the Cat that she fell in love with him. She
married another man, but a few years after that she ran away from
him and came to live with Okonkwo. In those days, she was the
great beauty of the village. That was thirty years ago. Ekwefi has
only had one child, her daughter Ezinma. Ezinma is a charming,
pretty, and clever young girl, one of her father's favorites, though
he rarely shows it. We see her helping the other wives, doing chores
for her mother, and bringing Okonkwo his food.
Analysis:
Chapter 5 fleshes out the portrait of Okonkwo's family life. His three
wives live together peacefully, and seem to have great affection for
one another. Ezinma is well-beloved, not only by Ekwefi and
Okonkwo, but by the other wives as well. The children live together
as brothers and sisters. Ikemefuna has been fully absorbed into the
family.
But Okonkwo rules with fear. His anger over the banana tree is
completely unfounded; he uses it as an excuse to beat someone. He
is madly self-absorbed, and does not see fit to learn constraint for
the sake of his family.
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Chapters 6-10 Summary and Analysis
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Themes