Physical And Mental Isolation In Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart

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A former president of Indonesia, Sukarno, stated "The worst cruelty that can be inflicted on a human being is isolation". In prisons all over the world, solitary confinement is a type of punishment where an inmate is isolated from everybody and everything for long periods of time to protect the prisoner when he or she is considered dangerous to themselves or others. However, research has proven that solitary confinement leads to great psychological and physiological breakdown as well as triggering many other mental illnesses. Sadly, physical and mental isolation is not restricted to criminals, but rather it is seen in everyday lives causing a tremendous amount of problems. Many authors purposefully isolate their novel's protagonists to …show more content…

The protagonists of this novel, Okonkwo, is an especially masculine leader in the Indu tribe in Nigeria. The novel starts off with some background information that Okonkwo was forced into independence at a very young age, mentally isolating him from other children and his family. Okonkwo reflects, "I began to fend for myself at an age when most people still suck at their mothers’ breasts." (Achebe, 9). Immediately this statement causes great sympathy for Okonkwo because of his parents terrible nurturing skills, as well as the lack of childhood that Okonkwo got to experience. Not only does it cause sympathetic feelings, but it also allows the reader to see Okonkwo's heroic qualities that he acquired at such a young age. Similarly to Winterson, Okonkwo put in effort to remove himself from the isolation that his family forced him into as well as making the reader feel compassionate towards …show more content…

In Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein's physical isolation causes him great mental illness that the reader sympathizes with, but he also refuses to receive help when it is offered to him making the reader very critical of him. Moreover, Winterson uses the same technique of gaining sympathy through her isolation in her memoir Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal, however conversely instead of judging her more critically, the reader glorifies her for her determination throughout the memoir. Finally, Achebe's Things Fall Apart encompasses all of these technique of building sympathy for Okonkwo because of his tough circumstances, while observing him as brave, but at the same time blaming him for everything wrong that he caused to himself. The reader can distinctly read these three novels and formulate conceptions about these protagonists because of their isolation. Furthermore, the reader can interpret the pain that physical and mental isolation inflicts on these characters returning to the issue of solitary confinement in prisons. In isolation anxiety and anger heighten making it impossible more the prisoners to control their impulses as well as causing long-lasting changes in the prisoner's minds. The human brain is not made to be in these conditions however still over than 80,000 U.S. prisoners live this way. No one deserves

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