Study Guide to Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
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A comprehensive study guide offering in-depth explanation, essay, and test prep for Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, regarded as one of literature’s first counter narratives.
As a classic novel written two years before Nigeria’s independence, Things Fall Apart showcases a pre-colonized Nigeria and the transformat
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Study Guide to Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe - Intelligent Education
BRIGHT NOTES: Things Fall Apart
www.BrightNotes.com
No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations in critical articles and reviews. For permissions, contact Influence Publishers http://www.influencepublishers.com
ISBN: 978-1-645420-62-0 (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-645420-63-7 (eBook)
Published in accordance with the U.S. Copyright Office Orphan Works and Mass Digitization report of the register of copyrights, June 2015.
Originally published by Monarch Press.
Steven H. Gale, 1990
2019 Edition published by Influence Publishers.
Interior design by Lapiz Digital Services. Cover Design by Thinkpen Designs.
Printed in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data forthcoming.
Names: Intelligent Education
Title: BRIGHT NOTES: Things Fall Apart
Subject: STU004000 STUDY AIDS / Book Notes
CONTENTS
1) Introduction to Things Fall Apart
2) Achebe’s Techniques and Style
3) The Novel’s Structure
4) Textual Analysis
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
5) Analysis of Major Characters
6) Additional Commentary and Comparisons
7) Ideas for Papers, Oral Reports, and Class Discussion
8) Bibliography
INTRODUCTION TO THINGS FALL APART
A STORY WITH UNIVERSAL APPEAL
Like any work of true art, Things Fall Apart can stand on its own, needing no study of historical background, literary history, anthropology, or current sociological concepts to make it meaningful. Plot, character development, theme, and overall style (use of language, structure, and so forth) are all strong enough to hold the reader’s interest, and it meets Horace’s criteria for great literature by being both entertaining and enlightening. Achebe is foremost a superb story-teller and the story that he tells contains universal elements so that it has a continuing meaning for people in times and cultures beyond that in which and about which it was written.
ANTHROPOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL ELEMENTS
On the other hand, it would be foolish to ignore certain levels of meaning in the book that give it added impact, reinforce its statements, or explain some of its nuances. Much of Achebe’s work, for example, has been the subject of studies with a decidedly anthropological or sociological bias, as opposed to a literary one. These elements are inherent in the tales and give anthropologists and sociologists’ glimpses into a culture that they might otherwise never experience - glimpses provided by one who is aware of the difference between the culture that he writes of and the culture that he is, at least in part, writing to. The anthropological and sociological examinations and discussions of Achebe’s tales also give the student of literature a wider perspective for understanding both the content of the novels and the author’s choice of techniques for expressing himself. For instance, R. Green’s The Clashing of Old and New
(The Nation, CCL, II, 1965) might prove useful for an interdisciplinary point of view, and, while limited, The Literature and Thought of Modern Africa (London, 1966) by Claude Wauthier is also of interest.
EARLY NIGERIAN CULTURES
For the fullest understanding of Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, it is worthwhile to trace certain historical facts and to examine pertinent aspects of Nigerian (or, rather, Ibo) culture, and then to review other African writing to gain a better appreciation of the scope of the author’s achievement, an achievement that becomes startlingly clear when his work is compared with that of his continental contemporaries. To begin, it is useful to consider that Nigeria has not always been a developing Third-World country, as it is perceived today. As early as 700 B.C., there were established cultures in the area. From about 500 B.C. to 200 A.D., the Iron Age Nok culture flourished on the Benue Plateau - this was during the time that Alexander the Great was creating the greatest empire yet seen in the Western world, and most of Europe was still in a primitive tribal state. Later, during the twelfth through the fourteenth centuries, advanced cultures appeared in the Yoruba area and in the north (where Muslim influence was felt), and the Ife terra cottas were among the finest examples of that art form ever created.
EUROPEAN CONTACT
West Africa has had contact of one sort or another with Europe for many centuries. There is evidence of trade goods being imported from the Mediterranean area even during the time of the great African kingdoms, and trade was well established by the European Middle Ages. For obvious reasons, there was little interest in European countries regarding annexation of African colonies until better transportation and communication systems were developed and until there were trade goods that made the effort worth the cost economically.
SLAVERY
In West Africa, the two major sources of British interest were gold and slaves, and Nigeria was to become one of the major slave-supplying areas of all Africa. There had been slavery in Africa long before the arrival of the British, of course; there was a limited amount of slavery practiced among the blacks from prehistoric times, a practice that Achebe alludes to in his novels, and this practice was expanded greatly by the Arab nations to the North. The first instance of Europeans becoming involved in the slave trade was in 1441 when a Portuguese vessel returned to Lisbon from an exploratory expedition with twelve slaves. Within a few years, the number of slaves being taken from Africa reached the thousands.
MAN-MONEY
Portuguese and British slavers visited Nigeria as early as the fifteenth century, and it was the slave trade that stimulated English interest in the country, though not until the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries when the trade was at its height. At one point in the early nineteenth century, in fact, Lagos was the largest slave depot in the region. Ironically, in 1807 England passed a law declaring the slave trade illegal and after that her interest in things African waned, although during an anti-slavery campaign Britain seized Lagos (in 1861), and continuing conflict with France led to a series of treaties between 1890 and 1898 that settled various boundary disputes. An interesting relic of slave-trading can still be found in Africa today in the form of the beaten black iron rods that were formerly used for money. The country-money,
as the rods are now called, is long and thin and twisted, like wrought iron, with the two ends being beaten flat, roundly wide at one end, sharply triangle-shaped at the other. The value of the rod is determined by its length (in the mid-1970s, for example, a piece from twelve to fifteen inches long and about an eighth to a quarter of an inch thick was worth one or two American cents). A huge, heavy iron rod, four to five feet in length, was called man-money
because it could be used to buy a man.
BRITISH COLONIAL SYSTEM
Leaving aside any question of morality, the British system of colonization traditionally has been more moderate and humane than most others. This system was based on two things: (1) the general English attitude toward its colonies and its responsibilities to those colonies (at least in part fostered by their experiences in America), and (2) the educational system set up within the colonized country to train native clerical workers and civil service employees (Nigeria boasts more university graduates than any other African nation,
according to a Newsweek cover story, Nigeria: The First Black Power,
March 4, 1974, p. 13). In West Africa,
George H. T. Kimble says in Tropical Africa (New York: Twentieth-Century Fund, 1960), Britain assumed minimum responsibilities and developed an efficient and inexpensive system to govern a large area.
This was the system of indirect rule
: that policy of allowing the powers of traditional rulers to remain intact to the maximum degree consonant with imperial rule
(Immanuel Wallerstein, Africa: The Politics of Independence, New York: Random House, 1961). In Nigeria