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Things Fall Apart

1) The novel follows the rise and fall of Okonkwo, a man from the village of Umuofia who achieves success through hard work but has a short temper. 2) Okonkwo is banished for seven years after killing a boy, which is a great disappointment. When he returns, he finds the village changed by Christian missionaries. 3) Tensions increase after a Christian disrupts a tribal meeting, leading the villagers to destroy the church. Okonkwo kills a messenger and loses tribal support, so he hangs himself, symbolizing the end of the old tribal way of life.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
377 views1 page

Things Fall Apart

1) The novel follows the rise and fall of Okonkwo, a man from the village of Umuofia who achieves success through hard work but has a short temper. 2) Okonkwo is banished for seven years after killing a boy, which is a great disappointment. When he returns, he finds the village changed by Christian missionaries. 3) Tensions increase after a Christian disrupts a tribal meeting, leading the villagers to destroy the church. Okonkwo kills a messenger and loses tribal support, so he hangs himself, symbolizing the end of the old tribal way of life.

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Ellen Jane Sila
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© © All Rights Reserved
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  • Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe (Summary): Provides a comprehensive summary of 'Things Fall Apart', focusing on the rise and fall of the protagonist Okonkwo, his relationships, and the cultural changes in his village.

Appendix C

THINGS FALL APART by Chinua Achebe


(Summary)
The novel deals with the rise and fall of Okonkwo , a man from the village of
Unuofia. Okonkwo was not born a great man, but he achieved success by his hard work.
His father was a lazy man who preferred playing the flute to tending the soil. Okonkwo
was opposed to his father’s way of life, and always feared failure. In order to prove his
ability, he had overthrown the greatest wrestler in nine villages, set himself up with
three wives, two barns filled with yams and a reputation for being a hard worker. The
reader learns that he was also one of the egwugwu--the masked spirits of the ancestors.
His importance is proved when he is sent as an emissary to Mbaino in order to negotiate
for hostages, and he returns successfully with a boy, Ikemefuna and a virgin.
Okonkwo has his faults, one of them being his impatience of less successful men
and secondly his pride over his own status. His stern exterior conceals a love for
Ikemefuna, who lives with him; an anxiety over his son Nwoye, who seems to take after
his father; and an adoration for his daughter Ezinma. His fiery temperament leads to
beating his second wife during the Week of Peace. He even shoots at her with his gun,
but luckily he misses. This shows his short temper and a tendency to act on impulse, a
tendency that backfires on him later on in the novel. The boy, Ikemefuna, is ordered to
death by the Oracle of the Hills and Caves. Though Okonkwo is upset, he shows his
fearlessness and impartiality by slaying the boy himself. His final fault against his tribe is
when he unintentionally shoots a boy and kills him; for this he is banished from the
village for seven years and has to live in his mother’s village of Mbanta. This is a great
disappointment for him although he is consoled and encouraged by his uncle, Uchendu.
The reader now hears of the arrival of the Christian missionaries, who take over
the village of Mbanta, as well as Umuofia, set up a church and proceed to convert the
tribesmen to Christianity. At first, they face much resistence, but gradually many of the
tribesmen including Okonkwo’s own son, Nwoye, are converted and follow the path of
Christ. After his period of exile, Okonkwo returns to Umuofia with his family and finds it
totally changed. The missionaries have done a lot for the village. Umuofia is prospering
economically, but Okonkwo is firm in his refusal to charge his religion.
The missionary Mr. Brown is overzealous in his methods. A Christian named
Enoch enters a meeting of the tribe in which the egwugwu is present, and he unmasks
one of them. This causes great anger, and the villagers make a decision to destroy the
church, which they eventually do. This action incites the wrath of the District
Commissioner, who invites Okonkwo along with five other men and overpowers and
imprisons them. These elders are humiliated in the prison. On their return, another
meeting is held. The commissioner sends some men to stop the proceedings, and
Okonkwo, in a fit of fury, beheads one of them. The tribe is disturbed and they let the
other men escape. Finding no more support from his tribesmen, Okonkwo hangs
himself. His world has fallen apart.
His tribesmen even refuse to cut him down and bury him since taking one’s own
life is a violation of the earth goddess, and his men would not bury such a man. His
friend Obierika’s words describe the tragedy most powerfully “That man was one of the
greatest men in Umuofia. You drove him to kill himself; and now he will be buried like a
dog.”
Okonkwo’s suicide is symbolic of the self-destruction of the tribe, for he was a
symbol of the power and pride that the tribe had and with its demise, the tribe’s moral
center and structure gave way to a more dominant one. With his death, the old way of
life is gone forever.

Appendix C 
 
THINGS FALL APART by Chinua Achebe 
(Summary) 
 
 
The novel deals with the rise and fall of Ok

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