(OED) “Respect is that how we think, take care, and treat each other nicely in our life and also society.” In other word, it means it’s a having relationship. “Respect is that we understand each other and accept each other.” We make connection with people while we live our life, and we have to accept others to maintain connection with them. “Respect is appreciate about what they’ve done and what their doing. Show deferential regard for and esteem or admire, also build monument of that specific person.” We talk about somebody (reference), we talk about what they’ve done and we talk about outcome, what they’ve changed. We try to remember somebody and respect somebody through have conversation about…
Heroes have existed all throughout history, whether in real life or in a novel. On the spectrum of heroes, they can range from epic heroes such as Odysseus and Hercules, who overcome many obstacles and succeed in the end of their stories, to tragic heroes such as Oedipus and Hamlet, who are brought down by a conflict or by their own weakness. Harry Potter could be defined as a hero, for he had faced many, many obstacles throughout his life and spent it fighting against an opposing force. In the end, he sacrificed himself but still succeeded and changed the lives of others for the better. Now, replace “Harry Potter” with “Okonkwo”. Does that still apply to the scenario in the same way? In Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo plays the role…
In the novel, “Things Fall Apart” by Chinua Achebe a Nigerian author, tells the history of a small village in Nigeria. The history is focused on the daily life of a man named Okonkwo. Okonkwo’s father, Unoka, was a man known for his laziness, and cowardice. He was unoccupied, poor, libertine, gentle, interested in conversation and in music more than anything else. Unoka died in disrepute, leaving many village debts unsettled. In response, Okonkwo consciously adopted opposite ideals and becomes productive, wealthy, thrifty, brave, violent, and adamantly rejects everything for which he believes his father stood. Okonkwo always leaded in his own way, a way which made his wives and children afraid of him. With the arrival of white missionaries,…
The white men pulled in enough individuals from Umuofia, particularly the individuals who involved the most reduced positions and the individuals who scrutinized the past request, to debilitate the town's adequacy and conviction. Those esteemed by the new establishments were those like Unoka. The better approaches for Umuofia were too fundamentally not quite the same as what Oknonkwo had set up as his way in his childhood. Despite the fact that suicide conflicted with the Umuofian conventions, it hadn't generally been about those customs on the most fundamental level, and Okonkwo did one final thing that his dad could never have had the quality of conviction to do. As it were, Okonkwo's suicide conformed to the methods for Umuofia; the genuine Umuofia that Okonkwo had possessed the capacity to relate to and that he looked for approval from had murdered itself with its malleability towards the new ways.…
To begin with, Okonkwo’s death marks the end of the Ibo culture in Umuofia. Anxious to return home, Okonkwo does not understand why everyone is allowing the missionaries to interfere with their lifestyle. Imposing a new religion and government, the white men do not understand or seem to care about how the clan operates, focusing solely on converting the clansmen to a supposedly superior ideology. As a result of his upbringing, Okonkwo is not afraid to fight for what he believes in, his tribe and culture, unlike most of the people in Umuofia. Originally convinced that Umuofia would fight against the new religion,…
What is a tragic hero? According to Aristotle " he is a character who is noble in nature, has a tragic flaw and discovers his fate by his own actions". Okonkwo is a tragic hero in Achebe's "Things Fall Apart". Is Okonkwo an Aristotelian tragic hero? By Aristotle’s definition Okonkwo meets all the criteria and although written thousands of years apart and in different cultural settings Okonkwo is comparatively similar to Oedipus in Sophocles’ “Oedipus the King”.…
In the book, Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe portrays the main character, Okonkwo, as a fearful and stubborn protagonist. But, when the Christians arrived Okonkwo is challenged because of the societal changes that took place. He was left behind on things that he thought he controlled and believed was still in style. Okonkwo is greatly affected by the presence of the Christians because he is forced to show a form of weakness and jealousy while previous to this he was a great leader and was never intimidated by anything or anyone.…
Many people need to accept the idea that others are going to be different. Not everyone is going to follow the rules. In “Things Fall Apart” by Chinua Achebe, Men are suppose to have a title, fame, and be powerful. A woman’s purpose in the ibo culture is quite different. Females are required to provide care for their children and husband. Females can’t do whatever they want unlike men in the Ibo culture. Females are seen as weak as compared to males. Men are seen as tough and are expected to do all the hard-work. Father and son relationships are based on the way men were raised. Oknonkwo didn’t grow up the way he wanted due to the fact how embarrassing his own father was. Oknonkwo wanted to be different from his father. Oknonkwo achieved that goal. What…
In the Novel, “Things Fall Apart” by Chinua Achebe Okonkwo and his culture have affected him greatly because of his great loyalty to his culture. He responded negatively to the cultural collisions that he faced and wanted to fight for their tribe. But they could not fight as when the white man showed up they changed their culture. The men in Umuofia went from being tough and strong to then being weak and soft after the white man appeared. This set up many Cultural collisions in Okonkwo’s life.…
William Faulkner’s short story “A Rose for Emily” carries a theme represented by a dying breed of that era, while using symbolism to represent tragedy, loneliness and some form of pride, the story also shows how far one will go to have the approval of others and the pursuit of happiness.…
In the image "Going to the Olympics," by Frank Romero, he used specific images to symbolize the city of Los Angeles. In the top of the painting we can observe a couple of men fighting and a horse. The two men fighting might represent the effort that the city has made to get where they are at this point, while the horse might represent the power that the people have when they're together. It also shows five cars, each with a heart above, which might mean all the missions in California and how lovely the people of California is.…
The Martyr A man’s quest to rebuild a once sacred tradition is soon forgotten and he himself, massacred by his own hands. Umuofia, a war like a village is quickly torn apart when white colonists ravage there once sacred religion into corruption and in this, a man named Okonkwo faces them and tries to summon an insurrection to chase the “evil” and bring back a once peaceful village. Okonkwo ultimately loses himself in search of his ideals through his own actions and radical perspectives. Okonkwo's actions tend to be wrapped around his ideals that he must outgrow his father’s shadow and that to be successful, one must commit to physical labor. Being weak in the land of Umuofia is usually seen as being feminine.…
“ We cannot leave the matter in his hands because he doesn’t not understand our customs, just as we do not understand his. We say he is foolish because he does not know our ways, and perhaps he says we are foolish because we do not know his. Let him go away” (*1). This quote shows the major theme of the book which is change vs tradition. The quote shows the theme perfectly; basically it shows the ignorance of most of the Umuofia clan and their fear of the white peoples culture taking over theirs. They are dealing with the question of whether change should be privileged over tradition. The people of Umuofia want a little change but at the same time they have fear of completely losing their way of life, the people are divided on the subject at hand at what the right and wrong thing to do is, and how much is to much change.…
In the novel Things Fall Apart the author Chinua Achebe explains how Okonkwo’s violent acts advance the plot. In the beginning of the novel Okonkwo is seen as someone who was greatly affected by his father Unoka during his childhood. Though as the story progresses you see different sides of Okonkwo. The choices and actions of Okonkwo has caused the story to move forward.…
Like any other man, Okonko wanted to be seen as strong not weak. Okonko’s father was wasn't well respected and was seen as weak since he often borrowed money from others and his family often went hungry. “That was years ago, when he was young. Unoka, the grown-up, was a failure. He was poor and his wife and children had barely enough to eat. People laughed at him, because he was a loafer, and they swore never to lend him any more money because he never paid back. But Unoka was such a man that he always succeeded in borrowing money, and pilling up in debts.” (Achebe) So when Okonko defeated Amalinze the Cat, he brought honor to his village. Okonko earning his honor meant a lot to him, now in his village he was seen as strong and powerful. Okonko wanted to be a hardworking man and not a lazy, wasteful man. So Okonko had no patience with of those two characteristics. “He had no patience with unsuccessful men. He had had no…