Finding Balance and Moderation in Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe

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The novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, revolves around the strong and masculine tribesman, Okonkwo, living in a small village in Nigeria. In the first half of his story, it tells about Okonkwo's slow fall in his tribe's society. From being the amazing wrestler who threw the undefeated "Amalinze the Cat", Okonkowo had it all. Until the death of a boy who was like another son to him made him feel like an old, withering woman and changes his way of living. Things began to get much worse when European settlers began to colonize in his tribe's land and convert his tribe to their religion. Okonkwo tries to keep his family from converting, but that doesn't stop the settlers. So, Okonkwo just watches his world fade away. In this novel, there is an important metaphor that Achebe says, "let the kite perch, and let the eagle perch too. If one say no to the other, let his wing break."(Achebe pg. 19). The meaning of this metaphor is there should be freedom which doesn't destroy one's freedom. How it relates to the story is that the falling of Okonkwo and his tribe to the European settler...

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