Ignorance Towards Ibo Culture In Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart

586 Words2 Pages

Ignorance Towards Ibo Culture Throughout literature the viewpoints have mostly consist from white European men, giving the audients a very one-sided opinion of cultural happenings. This is why Chinua Achebe, a Nigerian native, wrote “Things Fall Apart”. In this book the westerner’s ignorance to the Ibo culture and assumed superiority, causes Okonkwo sense of self proving Achebe’s theme and title that things really did fall apart. Okonkwo is first affected by the westerner’s cultural influence during his isolation. When Okonkwo accidently shot a child, causing him to be banished to his motherland where he hears the news of the white men and their influence within Umuofia. However, this does not truly affect Okonkwo until his son Nwoye is “among the missionaries in Umuofia” (Achebe 143). This is the …show more content…

Throughout the book Okonkwo’s character is pieced together. Even though he isn’t a likable person at first, it is impossible to deny the fact he is an unmoving courageous leader, “not afraid of war” (Achebe 13). This a stark contrast from his actions in the end of the book, which is the point. Achebe took two-hundred pages to construct a character, showing his morality, character, and family. Achebe then abruptly shows the impact of the westerner’s ignorance at the end making the reader reflect on the previous events leading to this outcome. Everything crumble due to the fact that the white men “put a knife of the things that held them together and now they have fallen apart” (Achebe 176). One of the things which fell apart was Okonkwo’s identity. “Things Fall Apart” is a revolutionary novel which shows the unseen sides of tribal culture in Africa to the Ignorant western world. Achebe’s great feat is impactful and necessary to read, effortlessly explaining the life of a man, Okonkwo, throughout a novel who previously only had “a reasonable

Open Document