Archetypes, while sometimes subtle, are quite apparent in Chinua Achebe’s novel Things Fall Apart. Okonkwo, the main character or hero of the story, is a prideful man, and let it be known that pride is considered a sin for a reason. The uncontrollable obsession that Okonkwo has with his pride and maintaining it is considered his tragic flaw, which ultimately leads to his downfall after a tragic, archetypal journey. His journey is made of different archetypes woven together, creating the devastating story of Okonkwo’s journey and eventual demise.
Okonkwo is deemed the hero of this story, but he is not a traditional hero. Much like the common archetype, Okonkwo represents a whole culture. Achebe wrote this book to display the true, complex culture of the Nigerian people, and Okonkwo is the piece on which the topic is presented. In Katie Bacon’s interview with Chinua Achebe, the author discusses his book. He believes that the world is “portraying Africa as a place […] where humanity is really not recognizable” (Bacon 219). Because of this, the well-known author wrote Things Fall
…show more content…
Apart with the intention to redefine how the world sees Africa and the people that live there. He shows the world what the continent is really like by portraying his people through the character Okonkwo. Another unique archetype is displayed between Okonkwo and his son Nwoye, a young boy that is the eldest of Okonkwo’s children. Nwoye is considered to be the outcast in this novel, another archetype tangled within the story of Okonkwo. He is rarely regarded in a positive light in his father’s eyes, seen for his “incipient laziness” (Achebe 10). Because of this trait, “[Okonkwo] sought to correct him by constant nagging and beating” (Achebe 10). The constant violence towards his son causes Okonkwo and Nwoye to drift apart. They estrange themselves enough that when the white missionaries come to their tribe, Nwoye leaves and joins the church after being threatened physically by his father. The separation between these two men was not of the physical sense but of the emotional kind, and the estrangement between the two caused tensions to rise, eventually resulting in Okonkwo’s eldest son leaving him forever. This creates another archetype to be woven into the journey of Okonkwo. Nwoye being the outcast character causes disaffection between father and son, resulting in the archetypical father-son conflict to become a part of the cluster of archetypes that create this story. In part of Chinua Achebe’s novel Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo must leave his village after accidentally killing another clansman when his gun misfires.
This, in a rather abstract way, can be considered the archetypical warrior’s journey, the journey to save one’s people. At first, it is a simple exile, leaving the village for seven years to atone for his crime. However, when the white missionaries arrive, Okonkwo yearns to fight them, save his people from splintering because of the intrusion of the white people. By the time he can fight back, it is too late. When “Okonkwo’s matchet descend[s] twice” and he kills the white messenger and the people “[break] into tumult instead of action”, he realizes that the clan has already been broken apart (Achebe 145). They can no longer act as one. The people split apart, too broken to band together and fight against the very people destroying their
culture. Some would disagree with the idea of multiple archetypes, especially the concept of Okonkwo being the hero of the story, but the characteristics of Okonkwo, Nwoye, and Okonkwo’s journey do not match one sole archetype. • “His whole life was dominated by fear, the fear of failure and weakness.” (Achebe 9). • “And so Okonkwo was ruled by one passion – to hate everything that his father Unoka had loved.” (Achebe 10). There is undeniable correlation with Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and tradition archetypes, meaning that there are multiple archetypes in the novel. [List all archetypes]. These archetypes blend together to create the tragic story of Okonkwo and his tribe
“He who will hold another down in the mud must stay in the mud to keep him down.” This quote by Chinua Achebe describes the self-inflictions when a person purposely goes after another. This goes hand-in-hand with the Nigerian author’s magnum opus, Things Fall Apart. For the duration of the book, Achebe uses subtle events to create amplifying changes. He uses Okonkwo’s relationship with others, his learning about the Oracle of the Hills and the Caves. Achebe also uses Okonkwo’s fear of change for the Ibo regarding to the missionaries and their spread of Christianity through the region. Creating universal and relatable characters, Chinua Achebe warns people of rash actions and their effects over time.
It challenged his identity by losing his high title in the clan due to the change in the village as well as new customs. He responded to the clash of cultures by attempting to encourage others to fight in his mission to get rid of the Western influences in the Ibo community. Because he failed to do so, he lost hope and refused to accept the new culture which caused him to hang himself. The conflict between Okonkwo and his clan’s decision to change their way of living was portrayed through characterization and plot development. Achebe gives the people of Africa a voice with Okonkwo’s character who stayed true to his roots. In Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe reveals to us Okonkwo’s response as the cultural collision of the English and Ibo challenged his sense of
Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart is a powerful novel about the social changes that occurred when the white man first arrived on the African continent. The novel is based on a conception of humans as self-reflexive beings and a definition of culture as a set of control mechanisms. Things Fall Apart is the story of Okonkwo, an elder, in the Igbo tribe. He is a fairly successful man who earned the respect of the tribal elders. The story of Okonkwo’s fall from a respected member of the tribe to an outcast who dies in disgrace graphically dramatizes the struggle between the altruistic values of Christianity and the lust for power that motivated European colonialism in Africa and undermined the indigenous culture of a nation.
One of the most commonly asked questions about the novel Things Fall Apart is: why did Achebe choose a tragic hero, Okonkwo, as the main character in the story. According to Nnoromele, “A hero, in the Igbo cultural belief system, is one with great courage and strength to work against destabilizing forces of his community, someone who affects, in a special way, the destinies of others by pursuing his own. He is a man noted for special achievements. His life is defined by ambivalence, because his actions must stand in sharp contrast to ordinary behavior”(Nnoromele). In my opinion, he chose this type of hero to show the correlation between Okonkwo’s rise and fall in the Igbo society to the rise and fall of the Igbo culture itself. Many commentators have come up with various reasons for Okonkwo’s failure in the novel. Some say that it is just his chi that causes him to be a failure; however others believe it is because he is incapable of dealing with his culture deteriorating before his eyes. In Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo’s character as a tragic hero is a result of his chi, inability to cope with the destruction of the Igbo culture, and ultimately, his own suicide.
Things Fall Apart, a novel by Chinua Achebe, is a story which goes into great depth with its character development. The descriptions of the characters in this book go beyond first impressions and delve deeply into the minds of the people being described by explaining their thoughts and the experiences of their lives. Okonkwo is perhaps the most interesting example of these descriptions throughout the novel. He is a very successful man who is driven by fear and shame. Without fear there can be no courage, but when one does not choose to be truly courageous, fear can overcome them and lead to hopelessness and despair as things begin to fall apart.
Things Fall Apart is an attention-grabbing novel full of violence, aggression, and oppression. Its main protagonist Okonkwo, on the surface appears to be a true tribesman, and a revered leader with qualities that far surpassed many among his clan. However, the physical and psychological qualities of Oknokwos’ character mirrored an individual who was nothing short of a “king like” ruler and conquer. Okonkwo traits of being a self-seeking, abusive, and cold-hearted individual made him a man that preys on the weak and young, and people in general who falls outside of his definition of a man. Okonkwo character lacks many characteristics that represent real strength, disciple, and bravery as his life came to a disappointing demise reflective of the weakness he spent his whole life avoiding. Okonkwo character in all fairness fails to stage some real virtues of a true leader, but rather that of a ruler.
The novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe is a story that opens the reader's mind to an entirely different way of living in a Nigerian village. Achebe was born in Nigeria in 1930, perhaps this is why he writes a whole book on a Nigerian village and introduces to us the ways of life for the Nigerian people. From the first page of the book to the last, Achebe allows the reader to enter the mind of the main character Okonkwo. Okonkwo is the leader of his village and is very respected for his many achievements. Although Okonkwo means well for his village, the novel invites the reader to see him has a flawed character who eventually suffers from the consequences of bad "masculine" decisions he makes throughout the book.
Conflict and Tradition in Things Fall Apart & nbsp;   ; The book Things Fall Apart successfully expressed how Chinua Achebe had succeeded in writing a different story. It pointed out the conflict of oneself, the traditional beliefs, and the religious matters of the Africans. Throughout the novel, Chinua Achebe used simple but dignified words and unlike other books, he also included some flashbacks and folktales to make the novel more interesting and comprehensible. Things Fall Apart was about a man named Okonkwo, who was always struggling with his inner fear although he was known for being a strong, powerful, and fearless warrior.
The character of Okonkwo in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart was driven by fear, a fear of change and losing his self-worth. He needed the village of Umuofia, his home, to remain untouched by time and progress because its system and structure were the measures by which he assigned worth and meaning in his own life. Okonkwo required this external order because of his childhood and a strained relationship with his father, which was also the root of his fears and subsequent drive for success. When the structure of Umuofia changed, as happens in society, Okonkwo was unable to adapt his methods of self-evaluation and ways of functioning in the world; the life he was determined to live could not survive a new environment and collapsed around him.
A small village in Nigeria, devoted to the sacred customs inherited over many years, dramatically revolutionizes as the white men from Europe invade Umuofia. Umuofia consists of a religion called Igbo, that the people in the community dote towards. Okonkwo, a man of leadership in Umuofia, apprehends the strife the white men bear. Hardship after hardship, Okonkwo subsists to the challenging transformation of his village. Chinua Achebe suggests that the missionaries promoting Christianity in his novel, Things Fall Apart, guides the Igbo society by providing refuge to the outcasts and bringing wealth to the village, but also destroys the society by decimating community.
The Importance of Things Fall Apart & nbsp; & nbsp; The novel "Things Fall Apart", by Chinua Achebe, was an eye-opening account of the life and eventual extinction of an African tribe called the Ibo. It focuses on one character, Okonkwo, who at a very early age set out on a quest of self-perfection. Coming from a family ruled by a man who was lazy and inconsistent with everything he did, Okonkwo vowed to never accept the fate of his father. Okonkwo and his family have suffered through many hard times in their lives, but usually managed to come out on top. Through terrible crop seasons and bad judgement calls, Okonkwo usually prevailed, until the day came when he was faced with a situation that could not be resolved by his strength and character alone.
All throughout history, we see this dichotomy between tradition and modernity. On one hand, we have tradition, the force living perpetually in the past and refusing to change. On the other hand, modernity leaves tradition behind in favor of progress. These two concepts, much like oil and water, dare to divide but coexist as a debatable founding solution. Not only are the themes Western ideas, but they have been present and are found in literature all around the world, from China to Africa.
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe is a story about personal beliefs,customs, and also a story about an identity confliction. There is struggle between family, culture, and religion of the Ibo tribes. It shows how things fall apart when these beliefs and customs are challenged and how a personal identity changes for a man. The novel concerns the life of Okonkwo, a leader and local wrestling champion throughout the villages of the Ibo ethnic group of Umuofia in Nigeria, Africa, his three wives, and his children. Throughout the novel, Okonkwo is internally challenged and slowly becomes someone that is no longer recognizable by his friends or his family. When Okonkwo faces change, his identity starts to fade.
Throughout history, there have been many instances of people struggling to identify and cope with change and tradition, and this is no different in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart.
Chinua Achebe's novel, Things Fall Apart, uses the changes in African tribal culture brought about by European colonization to illustrate the evolution of the character Okonkwo. As Okonkwo leads his life, his experiences, personality and thought are revealed to the reader. The obstacles he faces in life are made numerous as time progresses. Okonkwo's most significant challenge originates within himself. He also encounters problems not only when in opposition to the white culture, but in his own culture, as he becomes frustrated with tribal ideals that conflict with his own. The last adversary he encounters is of the physical world, brought upon himself by his emotional and cultural problems. The manner through which Okonkwo addresses his adversaries in Things Fall Apart creates the mechanism that leads to his eventual destruction.