Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Assignment One: Things Fall Apart

Prompt #1: Write a detailed summary of the first half of your book; explain the author’s purpose and your reaction to that purpose.

            Things Fall Apart was written in a time when most English literature represented Africa as an antisocial continent deserving of Western colonization and rule.  Chinua Achebe was born of a Protestant missionary in Nigeria and received an English education while absorbing tribal culture, such as oral storytelling.  Achebe wrote Things Fall Apart in order to portray the overwhelming complexities of one region’s tribal culture to an ignorant world.
            The novel begins with a thorough examination of Okonkwo, a native warrior of the Umuofia tribe and the main character.  He lives his life trying to get out of Unkoa’s shadow.  Unkoa was his father, who lived for music and love but left his family in poverty.  “Fortunately, among these people a man was judged according to his worth and not according to the worth of his father.”  Okonkwo builds himself up in the community through his own actions and becomes the opposite of his father.  He is a famous wrestler with a barn full of “yams, the king of crops,” a hut for each of his wives and an obi, or large living quarter, for himself.  The importance of language in the tribe is mentioned several times but Okonkwo is known to stammer when he is angry, unable to get his words out fast enough. 
One night before Okonkwo goes to bed he hears the village crier’s gong and receives the message that all men must appear at the market place for a meeting the next day.  At the meeting a strong public speaker tells the men that a neighboring clansmen has murdered a local daughter.  The orator sends Okonkwo as their fiercest warrior to deliver an ultimatum to the other clan; either offer a boy and a girl of there own or go to war.  Here it is known that, “Umuofia was feared by all its neighbors. It was powerful in war and in magic, and its priests and medicine men were feared in all the surrounding country… so the neighboring clans who naturally knew of these things feared Umuofia, and would not go to war against it without first trying a peaceful settlement.”  Okonkwo’s journey is successful. He delivers the two captives to his village where they give the girl to the victim’s husband.  Although he belongs to the clan, the tribe allows the boy, Ikemefuna, to live with Okonkwo until the gods decide his fate. 
In the next chapter Achebe presents the rich and complicated culture of tribal Nigeria.  He describes multiple shrines in different settings.  One in Okonkwo’s hut designated to worship of his personal gods and ancestors.  One in the center of town designated to an old woman who perfected the medicine of war. And one, which could only be entered crawling on your belly, designated to the Oracle of the Hills and the Caves who communicated with the Gods.  People came to this last shrine for answers, to find out what the future held or why the past happened in such ways.  This last shrine is presented in a story in which Unkoa goes to find out why his harvests had been continually unsuccessful only to be told he must work harder, that the gods have not harmed them.  We then learn that Okonkwo’s father was looked down upon even in death.  “He died of the swelling which was an abomination to the earth goddess.  When a man was afflicted with the swelling in the stomach and the limbs he was not allowed die in the house.  He was carried away to the Evil Forest and left to die there…He died and rotted away above the earth, and was not given the first or the second burial.”  The Evil Forest is another part of their complex culture.  In order not to curse their land they banish those who could upset the gods, such as twin babies and those who commit suicide, to the Evil Forest. 
After his father’s shameful death Okonkwo becomes motivated to live a prosperous life.  He goes to the home of the wealthiest­­ man in town, Nwakibie, and goes through the motions of a formal meeting to ask for a loan.  These motions are are another example of the rich culture presented by Achebe.
“He took a pot of palm-wine and a cock to Nwakibie.  Two elderly neighbors were sent for, and Nwakibie’s two grown-up sons were also present in his obi.  He presented a kola nut and an alligator pepper, which were passed round for all to see and then returned to him.  He broke the nut saying: ‘We all shall live.  We pray for life, children, a goof harvest and happiness…’
“After the kola nut had been eaten Okonkwo brought his palm-wine from the corner of the hut where it had been placed and stood it in the center of the group.  He addressed Nwakibie, calling him ‘Our father.’…The younger of [Nwakibie’s] sons…began to pour the wine.  The first cup went to Okwonkwo, who must taste his wine before anyone else. Then the group drank, beginning with the eldest man.”
The drinking of palm wine and the splitting of kola nut are repeated almost every time a man enters another’s home.  To me these customs represent a society that cares for each other.  Presenting the social characteristics of this misrepresented region forces the reader to re-imagine its people and history.
            This is getting really long so its time to focus more on plot than purpose.  In the Umuofia tribe farming is the way most families eat and they place a lot of its outcome on the gods.  They practice a week of peace to calm the land before each planting season and before the harvest they celebrate with the Feast of the New Yam to give thanks to the Earth Goddess.  In a bit of foreshadowing, Okonkwo breaks the week of peace by beating his wife after she prepares his dinner late.  After following a priest’s demands he is forgiven of his misstep.  His inability to control himself when commanded to is what will lead elder named Ezeudu visits him. Ezeudu takes him from his obi and says, “That boy calls you father. Do not beat a hand in his death…Umuofia has decided to kill him… They will take him outside Umuofia as is the custom, and kill him there.  But I want you to have nothing to do with it.  He calls you his father.”  When the men come to take Ikemefuna away they act as if he will be taken back to his village so as not to scare him. Okonkwo is forced to come along to avoid suspicion.  When the precession is in earshot of his village a man takes his machete to Ikemefuna but he survives the blow.  The boy runs to the back of the line, towards Okonkwo, screaming for his father.  “Dazed with fear, Okonkwo dew his machete and cut him down.  He was afraid of being thought weak.”  Ikemefuna’s death brings the first half of the story to an end

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