Examples Of Okonkwo's Sense Of Identity In Things Fall Apart

761 Words2 Pages

Two opposites never mix “Groups break up because they never got across what they wanted to do personally, and they have creative differences, and egos start to clash.” - Kendrick Lamar Sometimes you can’t find yourself into what you suppose is the right thing, but in reality is the wrong, but with the differences between this group and that group can cause a clash because of what you believe in and what they believe in isn't a matching ego. Okonkwo's sense of identity was challenged with the introduction of the Western ideas into the Ibo culture. Okonkwo started out in the novel as Strong, masculine, independent and as a hero, but the cultural collision of the British colonists and Ibo people affected Okonkwo to the point of bringing him a new attitude, opening him up, and letting him see the other side along with the reader. The reasons for Okonkwo's change in their sense of identity included not because he wanted to change but because he had to change. In the end their response to the introduction of the Western ideas shaped the meaning of the work as a whole by giving another view or outlook on who Okonkwo as another person then who he persuaded us to be in the beginning. …show more content…

We see evidence from this when the story says.”he was not afraid of war. He was a man of action, a man of war. Unlike his father, he could stand the look of blood. In Umuofia’s latest war he was the first to bring home a human head(chapter 2).”This evidence supports my claim because it shows that unlike his father, he was not afraid of violence and he was a man of war and this was well respected in

Open Document