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Changes In Igbo Culture

Decent Essays

A Changing Culture In the novel “Things Fall Apart” by Chinua Achebe, the reader is introduced to a time of crisis for the Igbo people, it is the beginning of colonialism there. Furthermore the reader understands that the novel is mainly about rapid changes in the Igbo culture due to colonialism. The rapid introduction of the new ideas of colonialism changes nearly every aspect tog Igbo culture. The European colonizers are forcing the Igbo to change their ways from their religion and family structure to the gender roles and relationships. Colonialism was the cause of many changes in Igbo culture.

In “Things Fall Apart”, and example of how the colonization is changing their culture is women. Women were mostly bound to their home and had little decision-making power prior to colonialism. During this time of colonialism the women suddenly found themselves as advocates of important social exchanges in the between the colonists and the Igbo people. “His mother and sisters worked hard enough, but they grew women’s crops, like coco-yams, beans and cassava. Yam, the king of crops, was a man’s crop.” (Achebe3). Nearly every feature of Igbo society is gendered, even crops. For example, the yam, because it is …show more content…

The Europeans forced the people of umoufia to change their religion which in turn also changed a lot of their culture. They connect their gods to the earth because they are very agricultural and they rely on the seasons and natural things in order to survive. They worship the goddess of the earth and are always careful to avoid committing sins against her for fear of vengeance that might wipe out an entire generation. The Igbo emphasis on numerous gods associated with nature and also on ancestors and somewhat divine contrasts sharply with the single God of Christianity which seems far less directly relevant to the Igbo

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