Things Fall Apart and the Issue of Culture
From a cultural analysis perspective, the two main cultures represented in Achebe's Things Fall Apart, stem from opposing religious/social positions and both react to and against one another in different ways, as illustrated by the actions of the main character Okonkwo, a native Igbo and leader of his community (violently committed to defending his tribe's ways and culture against other tribes and against the incoming foreign invasion of the Christian missionaries and British soldiers), and by Nwoye, Okonkwo's son who rejects the culture and beliefs of the Ibo tribe and converts to Christianity. The split between father and son represents the split at the heart of the novel between two cultures and two worldviews; neither is without its flaws and both speak to different matters of the heart and head. However, the irreconcilable differences that arise between the meeting of the two cultures and the imminent clash that leaves Okonkwo dead (from suicide) are rooted in both the personalities of those involved (Okonkwo is extremely passionate and hard-line; the British District Commissioner is cold-hearted and indifferent to the plight of the tribal community, viewing them as "primitives" in need of pacification) and the social customs that they are used to upholding (Achebe, 1996, p. 149). This paper will provide a cultural analysis of the novel and show how the manifestation of the two opposing cultures is tied to passion, ignorance, and inhumanity, which ironically contrasts with the aims and ideals of each of the two cultures at their most basic core.
As Achebe shows early on in the novel, the Igbo tribe's culture is based on respect as the tribe pays homage to the leaders and prays for blessings and commitment to one another. Thus they pray, "We shall all live. We pray for life, children, a good harvest and happiness. You will have what is good for you and I will have what is good for me" (Achebe, 1996, p. 14). There is a hint of resolution, of acceptance and even a submission to fate that echoes in the prayer as the community gives thanks early on. What Achebe also shows, however, is that Okonkwo is a man filled with pride (not that the pride is necessarily misplaced, for he is a great man, who has succeeded well and done well for himself and his tribe), but it is evident that he scorns weak things and weak people and does not like to associate with them. This flaw in Okonkwo is not cultural but rather personal, yet it builds on the cultural inheritance that he embraces and drives a wedge between him and his son, who comes to embrace the culture of the British Protestant Christians, who send missionaries into the Okonkwo's land. The son, described as weak throughout the novel, finds the Christian message appealing because it is based on the idea of grace coming through suffering and a God who loves the weak (they shall inherit the earth, after all). That such weakness should find such favor with a God is not something that Okonkwo can stand (his pride will not permit it -- though there is nothing really in his culture that suggests that he and his people are not also dependent upon a higher power for favors and sustenance, as they all make sacrifices to these powers throughout the story). The problem is that Okonkwo is not willing to allow this foreign culture to invade his sphere or communicate its message: he is protective of what is his and views the missionaries as invaders, who ultimately must be driven out.
As Osei-Nyame (1999) notes, there is a dichotomy within both cultures -- a split that manifests itself in similar terms (strength and weakness in Okonkwo's terms; good and evil in the Christian terms), and there are elements of both in each of the characters. Okonkwo is not as strong as he would like to think himself, and there is an episode in the novel where he becomes very drunk for a number of days and displays his own inability to carry on with his normal tasks or routines, crumbling under the weight of his own internal demons. Similarly, the demons of the colonialists are evident in their approach to the natives, viewing them as individuals that need to be conquered (aka "pacified") or even broken so as to fit more conveniently into the mold that the British would prefer to be in, so as to render them the more pliable for the aims of the colonizers....
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