Okonkwo Character Analysis

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Okonkwo was the impetuous fire that burned bright with pride and fear, and it burned all things that stood in its way. The clan of Umuofia supported this eternal flame of endeavor. Okonkwo’s life depended on a structured journey to become well known. He was the roaring flame that drew people nearer to him. But in fact, each and every moment consumed him.
When Okonkwo wanted to do something, he did it. The fear of being fragile like his father was the origin of his impulsiveness. While his father was “lazy and improvident” (Achebe, Pg.4), Okonkwo was a “man of action, a man of war” (Achebe, Ch2.Pg.4). If he “could not get his words out quickly enough, he would use his fists.” (Achebe, Pg.4) He walked on the tip of his feet and he was ready to “pounce on somebody. And he did pounce on people quite often.” (Achebe, Pg.4). His entire life was based on trying to be the opposite of his father and he did so by trying to have different personalities. Such impetuousness shrouded him with improvidence as he was quite incapable of thinking about the consequences of his actions. For an instance, he walked aimlessly around the compound in “suppressed anger, [and he] suddenly found an outlet.” (Achebe, Pg.34)Outraged, he beat his young wife and left the children crying, only to come back again – this time with a gun- and nearly killed her! On another occasion during the Week of Peace, his impulsive rage led him to beat his wife heavily. In his anger, he forgot that it was the Week of Peace, but “Okonkwo was not the man to stop beating somebody half-way through, not even for …a goddess.” (Achebe, Pg.26) Notice that his impulsive rage of manliness was more important that his beliefs. Okonkwo lacked the skill to think before acting and this will l...

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...th his fear of being weak and his resistance to change made him descend the two blows, and “the man’s head lay beside his uniformed body” (Achebe, Pg.180). When Okonkwo killed Ikemefuna, he burned a little. When Nwoye converted to Christianity, he burned a little. Little by little, Okonkwo’s rashness and manly actions backfired on himself. Now, it seemed that Umuofia was the only thing of strength that will give the very meaning to Okonkwo’s life. But when he realized that “Umuofia would not go to war… they had broken into tumult instead of action” (Achebe, Pg.180), he was faced with two choices: kill himself, or get hanged by white men. All the things that he worked so hard had fallen apart. Okonkwo was the roaring flame and Umuofia was the only kindle left on which he burned bright. With no Umuofia, Okonkwo’s flame consumed itself and ultimately destroyed him.

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