Things Fall Apart Diction Essay

607 Words2 Pages

In “Chapter 24” of Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe adopts a spiteful and grevious tone, and utilizes diction, symbolism, and figurative language to capture the pinnacle of the extirpation of the Igbo tribe. Achebe uses intense diction throughout the chapter when construing
Okonkwo’s feelings about his fellow clansmen and the Europeans. Since his tone is meant to provoke emotion, he laces his sentences with temerit words like “vengeance,” (Achebe 199) and “tumult,” (Achebe 203). The use of his diction emphasizes the agonizing feelings of the clan, especially those of Okonkwo. Alternatively, Achebe utilizes a surfeit of Igbo words such as “nno,” (Achebe 199) meaning “welcome,”and “Umuofia Kwenu,” (Achebe 202) a phrase used to show the tribe members were paying attention during …show more content…

The use of African words in Things Fall Apart helped emphasize the importance of Igbo culture, especially upon its extirpation. In addition to diction, Achebe, using symbolism, emphasized the relevance of the silk-cotton tree and the tenacity of Okika’s stories. During the final tribe meeting, when Okonkwo was looking for Oganwe, a man who Okonkwo saw as weak, Okonkwo found “him [Oganwe] sitting under the silk-cotton tree.” (Achebe 201) The placement of his seat was under the tree that symbolized the spirits of good children, who supposedly lived in the tree waiting to be born. The mention that he was was sitting there symbolized tribal beliefs in the ancestors and spirits, and the use of the term “good children,” foreshadowed that Oganwe would not advise going to war. In addition to the symbol of silk-cotton tree,

Open Document