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Things Fall Apart

Decent Essays

As you could probably guess from the title, Chinua Achebe’s masterpiece is no cheery fairy tale. From the moment it opens with W.B. Yeats’s haunting poem, pieces are being chipped away and fall silently to the dust. However, things do not truly fall apart until the final act and freezing conclusion. Although the storytelling and plot is very straightforward, (usually erring on the blunt side of the rhetorical spectrum) the true genius of the book lies in its subtleties. By the end of the story things have fallen apart for Okonkwo and his people, but it's not until that ending that the reader can put the pieces together to fully appreciate the novel’s important and profound message. Ultimately, the book does resolve both of the main conflicts. Okonkwo’s inner turmoil is finally …show more content…

But his whole life was dominated by fear, fear of failure and of weakness. It was deeper and more intimate than the fear of evil and capricious gods and of magic, the fear of the forest, and of the forces of nature, malevolent, red in tooth and claw.” It was this deeply ingrained fear that ultimately lead Okonkwo to his downfall and it’s the same fundamental fear that led to the downfall of his people. The clan’s unwavering pursuit of strength and stability was also rooted in this fear and it was the fear that won out in the face of the European invaders. Okonkwo’s people were unable to change but equally unable to fight for the only way of life they knew. In many ways, Okonkwo was the personification of the Igbo people’s core values. The tragic irony of him being exiled by his own people reveals the fundamental fallacies of their perspectives and foreshadows the fall of both Okonkwo and his village. Nevertheless, they are not portrayed as solely a doomed people nor as unreasonable savages. Although he doesn’t let everybody see it, Okonkwo does a lot for the love of his daughter and his people put unity and family above nearly all

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