Things Fall Apart and its Representation: Chinua Achebe

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The novel Things Fall Apart, displays Okonkwo, a local leader in the village of Nigeria. It describes how his family, comrades and the society and culture of lgbo inherit under the influence of British Colonialism and Christian missionaries during the late nineteen century. The protagonist Okonkwo is portrayed as a masculine and irritable solider who tries to prevent his villages from the invasion of Christianity, but eventually fails. He is a tragic hero who represents a culture that has been replaced by Christianity. On the other hand, Mr. Brown is a representation of Western culture that at first is a missionary but turns in to a colonizer. In the text, Okonkwo’s flaw characteristics result his own destruction, as the culture he represents is ultimately displaced by a more fully developed culture. We cannot argue which culture is more superior but a debate is raised, of who is responsible for the destruction of Lgbo culture. However, there are defects in Okonkwo’s culture and I believe that a weak and vacillating culture will not be respected and is determined to be replaced.
In article “Charting the Constellation: Past and Present in Things Fall Apart”, author Sofia Samatar asserts: “This fraying or ‘falling apart’ is preceded by a vivid re-imagining of pre-colonial Igbo society as a logical whole, a structure operating according to its own interior laws.” (3) The Igbo society operates based on its own rules and cultures that are indifferent and solitary. They worship different gods and believe that different god controls different parts of human’s routine life. They celebrate different holiday- Week of Peace which “No work was done during the Week of Peace. People called on their neighbors and drank wine.” (Achebe...

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... the country that had been colonized for more than one decade. If we refer back to the history, we can clearly observe that the invasion of western country stimulates the process of evolution and civilizational development in China. I am not praising that the colonization is a effective approach, but it does speed up the civilization.
As the story’s name -Things Fall Apart suggests,Igbo society’s representative Okonowo eventually dies alone and the entire community collapses. When two cultures collide, the weaker one is determined to be replaced.

Work Cited
SparkNotes Editors. “SparkNote on Things Fall Apart.” SparkNotes.com. SparkNotes LLC. 2002. Web. 5 Mar. 2014.

Samatar, Sofia. "Charting The Constellation: Past And Present In Things Fall Apart." Research In African Literatures 42.2 (2011): 60-71. OmniFile Full Text Select (H.W. Wilson). Web. 15 Mar. 2014.

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