Themes in Things Fall Apart

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About This Presentation

Themes in Things Fall Apart


Slide Content

The African Literature
Prepared by
Monika Makwana
Department of English

•Themes in Things Fall Apart
•Name:-Monika Makwana
•Roll no:-19
•Paper No:-13 The African Literature
•Topic:-Themes in Things Fall Apart
•Enrollment No:-206908420190027
•Email I’d:[email protected]
•Submitted to:-S. B. Gardi department of
English

•Introduction of the novel
•Things Fall Apartis a
novel.
•Written by Nigerian
author Chinua Achebe.
•Published in 1958.
•It is story chronicles pre-
colonial life in the south-
eastern part of Nigeria
and the arrival of the
Europeans during the
late nineteenth century.

•About the Author
•Albert Chinualumogu
Achebe
•Born on 16 November
1930
•He was a Nigerian novelist,
poet, professor, and critic.
•His first novelThings Fall
Apartin 1958, often
considered
hismasterpieceis the most
widely read book in
modernAfrican literature.

•Things Fall apart
The struggle between change
and tradition
Varying interpretations
of Masculinity
Language as a sign of
culture difference
Generational divide
Pride
Repression
Drum language
Ethnographic distance

•The struggle between change and
tradition
•Things Fall Apartdeals with how the
prospect and reality of change affect
various characters.
•The tension about whether change
should be privileged over tradition
often involves questions of personal
status.
•Okonkwo, for example, resists the
new political and religious orders
because he feels that they are not
manly and that he himself will not be
manly if he consents to join or even
tolerate them.
•To some extent, Okonkwo’s
resistance of cultural change is also
due to his fear of losing societal
status.
•His sense of self-worth is dependent
upon the traditional standards by
which society judges him.

•Varying interpretations of Masculinity
•Okonkwo’s relationship with his late father
shapes much of his violent and ambitious
demeanor.
•He wants to rise above his father’s legacy of
spendthrift, indolent behavior, which he views
as weak and therefore effeminate.
•This association is inherent in the clan’s
language—the narrator mentions that the
word for a man who has not taken any of the
expensive, prestige-indicating titles
isagbala,which also means “woman.” But,
for the most part, Okonkwo’s idea of
manliness is not the clan’s
•He associates masculinity with aggression
and feels that anger is the only emotion that
he should display. For this reason, he
frequently beats his wives, even threatening
to kill them from time to time..

•Language as a sign of culture
difference
•Language is an important theme inThings Fall
Aparton several levels.
•In demonstrating the imaginative, often formal
language of the Igbo, Achebe emphasizes that
Africa is not the silent or incomprehensible
continent that books such asHeart of
Darknessmade it out to be.
•Rather, by peppering the novel with Igbo words,
Achebe shows that the Igbo language is too
complex for direct translation into English.
•Similarly, Igbo culture cannot be understood
within the framework of European colonialist
values.
•Achebe also points out that Africa has
manydifferentlanguages: the villagers of
Umuofia, for example, make fun of Mr. Brown’s
translator because his language is slightly
different from their own.

•Generational divide
•Things Fall Apartspotlights two significant
generational divides.
•The first divide separates Okonkwo from his father,
Unoka.
•Unlike his son, Unoka is not a warrior, nor has he
distinguished himself as a man in any other way.
•Instead, Unoka prefers to drink and play music with
friends.
•For a hypermasculine man like Okonkwo, Unoka’s
lack of drive is shameful, and Okonkwo dismisses
his father as a coward.
•Just as Okonkwo is divided from his father, he is
also divided from his eldest son, Nwoye.

Example

•Pride
•Okonkwo’s greatest weakness is his
pride, which is constantly under threat
both from within his community and from
without.
•Okonkwo takes pride in his
achievements.
•This pride is justifiable, since he has
accomplished a lot.
•Not only has he proven himself among
Umuofia’s fiercest warriors, but he has
also climbed Umuofia’s social ladder
faster than any of his peers.
•Yet Okonkwo’s pride also makes him
quick to disdain others who don’t live up
to his high standards.

Example:-

•Repression
•ThroughoutThings Fall
ApartOkonkwo struggles with
repressing his emotions.
•He represses his emotions
because, more than anything
else, he fears appearing weak
and effeminate.
•Over and over in the novel
Okonkwo’s inner struggle to
quash all emotional responses
leads him to express himself
with excessive cruelty

Example:-

•Drum language
•Drums play an important role in Umuofia.
ThroughoutThings Fall Apartthe narrator emphasizes
drums’ ability to generate excitement and even
communicate specific information. Drums often signal
the initiation of a ceremony.
•For example, a persistent drum beat sets Umuofia’s
annual wrestling match in motion, and the sound fills the
village until “their sound was no longer a separate thing
from the living village.

Example :-

•Ethnographic distance
•The term “ethnographic distance” refers to a method in
anthropology where the anthropologists distance
themselves from the culture they are studying in order to
make sense of that culture.
•At several points in the novel, the narrator, who
otherwise seems fully immersed in Igbo culture, takes a
step back in order to explain certain aspects of the Igbo
world to the reader.
•For example, when Okonkwo’s first wife calls out to
Ekwefi in chapter five, Ekwefi calls back from inside her
hut, “Is that me?” This response may seem strange to
non-Igbo readers, so the narrator explains the cultural
logic of Ekwefi’s response: “That was the way people
answered calls from outside

Example:-

Conclusion
•Achebe tries to explain whole story
through these themes. He talked
about mostly on character of
Okonkwo.

Reference
•https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/things/

Thank you