of that person. The second source‚ The Stranger‚ expresses how conforming to people’s expectations and seeking their approval and acceptance‚ leads to dependency‚ abuse of influence‚ and creates a person viewed as different. The last source‚ Things Fall Apart‚ expresses how not conforming leads to a person becoming an outsider to their own world. A trend found within all three sources is that with conformity and nonconformity comes a separation between society and people who are outsiders‚ or the
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When turmoil comes about‚ many have merely one attribute to rely on to help them overcome certain disasters: their faith. The characters of Things Fall Apart are no exception. The people of Umuofia call upon representatives of the spirit world as a means of hospitality. They rely on their religion to settle resolutions with other tribes and to answer questions. They depend on the spirit world also to take care of punishments and in addition play a significant role on new born babies. Unfortunately
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what people think you are” (John Wooden). The quote is about when people become too obsessed with their images‚ they would actually lose their true characters. In Things Fall Apart‚ the author Chinua Achebe implies this message throughout the story. It is an archetypal modern African novel written in 1958. The novel is about the tragic fall of the protagonist Okonkwo‚ and the Igbo culture. Okonkwo is a fiercely competitive and influential leader within the Igbo tribe. Later on‚ he accidentally shoots
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Unoka’s and Okonkwo’s success is based on performance‚ which is a reflection of their self determination and hard work. Unoka was a very lazy man with little drive and that reflected on his success; he was a debtor‚ unsuccessful with yams‚ and a drunk. “In his day he was lazy and improvident and was quite incapable of thinking about tomorrow. If any money came his way‚ and it seldom did‚ he immediately bought gourds of palm-wine‚ called round his neighbors and made merry” (Achebe 4). Unoka’s
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The Clash of Cultures In the novel‚ Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe‚ the Igbo culture is rapidly decreasing due to the force of change caused by the difference of culture and traditions by Christians who enter their society. Achebe points out the white missionaries destroying the Igbo culture because they cannot simply understand and relate their them and their traditions. This is a sign of pure blindness to the way of people’s lives. In Umofia‚ religion is not a just one’s personal belief
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in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world. W. B. Yeats‚ "The Second Coming" Summary: Chapter One Among the Igbo . . . proverbs are the palm-oil with which words are eaten. Okonkwo is a wealthy and respected warrior of the Umuofia clan‚ a lower Nigerian tribe that is part of a consortium of nine connected villages‚ including Okonkwo’s village‚ Iguedo. In his youth‚ he brought honor to his village
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THINGS FALL APART Vocabulary CHAPTER 1 WILY - (of a person) clever‚ having a very good understanding of situations‚ possibilities and people‚ and often willing to use tricks to achieve an aim a wily politician POUNCE - to jump or move quickly in order to catch or take hold of something The cat sat in the tree ready to pounce on the ducks below. The police were waiting to pounce when he arrived at the airport. STAMMER - to speak or say something with unusual pauses or repeated
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As the acclaimed author of Things Fall Apart‚ Chinua Achebe once said‚ “Art has a social purpose [and] art belongs to the people… The total life of a man is reflected in his art” (Popova). These words hold true in Ibo culture‚ for whom the presence of art is essential. The tribe often uses masks‚ carvings‚ and tattoos as forms of artistic expression (“Igbo”). Tattoos are essential to Ibo culture as they convey the tribe’s identity. Yams signify honor and masculinity‚ traits the Ibo idolize. Achebe
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Things Fall Apart is a novel set around the year 1900 describing a tribal group in Western Africa called the Ibo. The Ibo were a very successful group whose culture was built around agriculture. They lived in villages and clans and every man grew crops such as yam to successfully sustain themselves and their families. They had a complex social structure where hardworking men and elders were on the top and untitled or lazy men and women were on the bottom. They also had a superstitious polytheistic
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Things Fall Apart-Universal Appeal Confronted with a global conscious filled with hazy‚ negative conception of the African reality‚ appalled with such one sided works as Heart of Darkness and Mr. Johnson‚ Chinua Achebe determined in 1958 to "inform the outside world about Ibo cultural traditions"1. One can appreciate then‚ Achebe ’s inclusion of universal themes and concepts in is novel as a means of bridging the cultural gap with his audience and reiterating that Africans are in the end‚ human
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