Narritive Analysis-Americanah
Narritive Analysis-Americanah
Narritive Analysis-Americanah
English 211
Americanah
Throughout our time with racism or lose of hope, we tend to make decisions that we
might regret. Americanah shows us those images in our head for example when Ifemelu was
communication with a character from registration and the character did not think that Ifemelu
knew English, we all tend to deal with something within our lives and Chimamanda Ngozi
Adichie the author of Americanah tells us her novel of what others might feel. The narrator gives
us a perspective, one that we could never forget. It shows us how much we are in common and
how we see things in a matter of crisis. Obinze is the character I am narrating for chapter 23. He
We see Obinze’s character feeling scared for events that he shouldn’t be doing. While in
London, He meets the Angolans Family who is going to help Obinze get his green card illegally
by marrying Cliotilde, his bride-to-be. The only reason Obinze is doing it illegally is because he
is in the country illegally and needs help because he does not want to be deported back to
Nigeria. Obinze states “I just want to know that you’re sure about doing this.” (283). While
doing this, he did not know if Cliotilde was okay with what they were doing, he made sure but
after he was making sure she had said “yes”, it was not what Obinze was expecting but it was an
answer. I must wonder if she was okay with it but did not want to tell the truth, we do not see this
other side of the story, but we only see one side of it. The author of the story felt like it was
necessary to only include a troubled side of it, the story could have changed, if it did Obinze
could have been deported and would’ve never got a visa from his mother. The narrator
introduces this concern by saying “she played with her straw, shyly, not meeting his eyes…” This
statement shows to me that she wasn’t comfortable with the answer that she gave and that she
regretted doing it in the first place. The narrator doesn’t tell us the other side but gives us piece
by piece on what Cliotilde was thinking when he asked her if she was okay with the plan that
When reading the novel, we see a continues order, we see it going back and forth in time
and it shows us how much every single detail was projected to show us an image. We also see
our characters emotions changing with every skip of the story, as if it was foreshadowing an
event or remembering a specific event for the reader. “The memory, clear as a light beam, took
Obinze back to a time when he still believed the universe would bend according to his will.”
(287) When the narrator stated this, it shows that there are good memories that he wished were in
his situation at the time. It also shows us a perspective that he is remembering a event that is
important to the story, it gives us an insight on how the character is feeling during a tense
situation and what they think about. We later see in the chapter that Obinze was speaking with
his mother about her handing him a six-month visa to go to London. This shows us a time
backwards in which he was having a hard time getting his visa towards America. “Maybe you
can get to America from there. I know that your mind is no longer here.” Although we see a ton
of help from his mother in the story, Obinze could have never imagined that she would give him
a visa to London to help him get back to America. There may be some details that never played
out from the narrator’s point of view, for example if something had changed with the relationship
with his mother and him after giving him the visa to go to London. I must wonder, does the
narrator tell is their point of view for a reason or does it all connect to the story with its proper
event?
While reading chapter 23 repeatedly, I feel the same energy coming back towards me,
scared and terrified. I see this type of encounters every day, whether it’s trying to go to a better
place or trying to find a good job to support someone. Obinze shows us that he does more than
what he wanted to do. The narrator took a good perspective towards his actions to give us the
right word choices to show us how Obinze is feeling. “And each time he emerged from the air-
conditioned cool of the embassy building and into the harsh sunlight, stunned and unbelieving.”
(289). Dedicated is one descriptive that the narrator shows us, they tell us that he kept returning
within the next few months to see if anything had changed. Reading that paragraph very
thoroughly I noticed he was scared to be there because of his race, America was just recovering
the events of a terrorist attack and everyone that was “different” was looked differently because
everyone was scared. Obinze’s mother says, “it’s the terrorism fears.” It had affected everyone
of color who was trying to find a better place in America, these challenges stopped everyone
from trying to pursue their dreams into the U.S. because of others seeing them very differently,
like they are a danger to society. The narrator mentions this challenge to Obinze because
everywhere someone would go there will always be a challenge to overcome and there will
sometimes be a solution to the problem or sometimes the problem will stay there without a
solution. Many narrators in books do not give enough perspective like the one in Americanah
does, giving us emotions and feelings from every character is determination, not only for the
author but also for the reader. It’s different but important at the same time. Americanah is a very
interesting book to start reading but chapter 23 focuses us on struggle’s that Obinze had.
In conclusion, we see many narrators focus on giving emotions towards their characters
but not to this extent. We see their emotions and their struggles with challenges that they came
up on, as if it was trying to get to America or seeing the fear of others because of an act of
terrorism. Narrators’ points are a great advantage to understanding the full story that they are
trying to tell. Without them we would not understand what the references are trying to say but we
would only see what is in front of us and not behind the actual meaning.