Archetypes In Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart

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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…

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

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