Brief Biography of Chinua Achebe
Brief Biography of Chinua Achebe
Brief Biography of Chinua Achebe
Achebe was raised by his parents in the Igbo town of Ogidi in southeastern
Nigeria.
Although his parents were Protestant and practiced the Christian faith, Achebe
and his siblings were also exposed to traditional Igbo culture, which included a
heavy emphasis on storytelling.
Achebe excelled in school and began writing stories as a university student.
After graduation, he worked first as an English teacher in the town of Oba.
Later, he worked for the Nigerian Broadcasting Service (NBS) in the metropolis
of Lagos.
He published and gained worldwide attention for Things Fall Apart in 1958.
Over the next several decades, Achebe was involved in a mix of academia and
Nigerian politics, publishing a number of short stories, children's books, and
essay collections and splitting his time between Nigeria and the United States
until 1990, when he returned to the US after a car accident left him partially
disabled.
Achebe continued to publish and held a faculty position at Brown University from
2009 until his death in 2013.
Biography
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Albert Chinualumogu Achebe was born in Ogidi, Nigeria, on November 16, 1930, a time
of religious upheaval. His parents, converts to Christianity, shunned those loyal to the
traditional Igbo (also spelled Ibo) religion. Achebe was fascinated, however, by tribal
practice. At eight he learned English and was exposed to Eurocentric notions of Africans
as backward people, a dated, imperialist view he spent his life refuting.
At university he began to reclaim his African heritage, dropping his first name, Albert, in
favor of Chinua, a shortened version of his Igbo middle name, and switching his studies
from medicine to liberal arts. Achebe believed it was essential that African voices tell the
stories of their people. He had come to recognize the inherent racism of British novelists
of the early 20th century who chose Africa for their settings. Achebe refers in his
writings and public lectures to the writer's responsibility to his or her community and to
the importance of creating authentic criteria for writing in Africa.
Things Fall Apart was Achebe's first published novel—and it was a book that almost did
not see the light of day. Achebe had handwritten his book and sent the manuscript off to
London to be typed. When months passed without the typed manuscript turning up,
Achebe was distraught. Finally, after a friend visited the typing service on his behalf, the
manuscript arrived, and Achebe sent it to publishers for review. Things Fall Apart was
published in 1958. Two follow-ups, No Longer at Ease (1960) and Arrow of
God (1964), concern the same theme: the clash between traditional African ways of life
and the religious and social practices imposed by the British.
In Things Fall Apart Achebe voices his grievances against the ineptitude and racism of
British colonial rule. Following Nigerian independence in 1960, Achebe's focus evolved
to criticism of the country's corrupt African dictators and the citizens who accepted their
violent leadership. A fictional military coup in his novel A Man of the People (1966)
convinced Nigeria's government that Achebe helped plan the January 1966 coup that led
to the 1967 outbreak of the Nigerian Civil War. Conflict erupted when the southeast
provinces of Nigeria—which had a largely Igbo population—seceded to form the
Republic of Biafra. Achebe and his family fled to England, where the civil war became
the subject of many of his essays, short stories, and poems, including the
volumes Morning Yet on Creation Day (1975), Girls at War (1972), and Beware, Soul-
Brother (1971). Achebe's autobiographical memoir, There Was a Country: A Personal
History of Biafra (2012), recounts his role in the civil war as Biafra's international
ambassador and communications minister.
In addition to his writing, Achebe shared his views on the importance and responsibility
of the writer during stints as a professor at the University of Ibadan (Nigeria),
University of Nigeria, University of Massachusetts (Amherst), University of Connecticut,
Bard College (New York), and Brown University (Providence, Rhode Island). In the
1970s he helped shape Nigerian literature while serving as director of two publishing
houses: Heinemann Educational Books and Nwankwo-Ifejika. He was founding editor
of Heinemann's African Writers Series.
Partially paralyzed in a car accident in Africa in 1990, Achebe moved to the United
States, where he could receive better medical care. He continued to write and teach until
his death on March 21, 2013, at age 82.
Things Fall Apart is set in 1890, during the early days of colonialism in Nigeria.
Achebe depicts Igbo society in transition, from its first contact with the British
colonialists to the growing dominance of British rule over the indigenous people.
Literary works about this period often painted stereotypical portraits of native
Africans as primitives—even works that were critical of the European colonizers,
such as Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad depicted Africans as savages who
were both oppressed by and excited the savagery of white Christian Europeans
(see “Joseph Conrad: ‘A Bloody Racist'” below).
Achebe's novel is a response to these colonialist works of literature—Things Fall
Apart is a postcolonial novel that strives to revise previous stereotypes by
portraying both cultures with a neutral eye, focusing on the complexity of Igbo
traditions.
When Written: 1957
Where Written: Nigeria
When Published: 1958
Literary Period: Post-colonialism
Genre: Novel / Tragedy
Things Fall Apart
The novel is loosely based on events that took place in the time of Achebe’s grandfather,
Okonkwo, on whom the central character in the novel is based. Its three parts describe:
● The life of the Ibo people before the arrival of white people: 13 short, largely self
contained chapters, illustrating various aspects of the way of life of the Ibo people in a
culture of tradition but also of questioning those traditions.
● Okonkwo’s seven years of exile and the arrival of the colonial culture of missionaries,
bureaucracy and white officialdom; the effects of that arrival, including the conversion
of Okonkwo’s son Nwoye and his subsequent alienation from his father.
● How the white people’s law, education, power and economics strangle and destroy the
whole Ibo culture as described in the first section; Okonkwo’s return to Umuofia after
his exile and his tragic end.
This is the essential novel about the colonisation of Africa, written from the point of
view of the indigenous African. It has been translated into over forty languages and is as
widely read and admired today as when it was first published in 1958.
Contrasting Cultures
Achebe said that Things Fall Apart was ‘an act of atonement with my past, the ritual
return and homage of a prodigal son.’
In the novel, both the native Ibo culture and the white people’s culture have strengths
and weaknesses. Achebe asks us to contemplate what it is in the former, perhaps as
embodied in the portrait of Okonkwo that contributes to its disintegration.
The central idea of the novel, therefore, is to neither support nor condemn either of the
rival cultures that are presented, but to hold up a mirror to its readers and challenge
them with their own strengths and weaknesses and those of their way(s) of life. It is not
about colonisation or the rival claims of coloniser and colonised: rather about the rival
claims of individual self interest and expression versus the essential need for loyalty to
the clan/tribe/nation.
Where these come into irreconcilable (and at times only partly understood) conflict,
things fall apart. Our mission is to understand Achebe’s analysis of how that happens in
the Ibo society he delineates, which, to repeat, is embodied in the portrait of Okonkwo.
The portrait of the white men at the end of the story, therefore, embodies a series of
pressure points that serve to crack, uproot and destroy what has seemed to be a society
in which there is a place for everything and everything is in its place.
Summary
As a young man, Okonkwo becomes one of the greatest wrestlers in the clan.
Okonkwo values strength and aggression, traits he believes are masculine, and his
worst fear is to be thought of as feminine or weak, like his father, Unoka.
Okonkwo's wealth and status within the tribe grow, and he becomes one of the
greatest men in the land, with three wives and a large stock of yams. He treats his
family with a heavy hand, believing that the only emotion worth showing is anger.
Okonkwo is particularly worried about his eldest son, Nwoye, in whom he sees
signs of laziness reminiscent of Unoka.
One day, the clan settles an argument with a neighboring village by demanding
the sacrifice of a virgin and a 15-year-old boy named Ikemefuna, who lives with
Okonkwo's family for the next three years.
While living with Okonkwo's family, Ikemefuna becomes very close to Nwoye,
sharing folktales and encouraging him to enjoy masculine tasks. Okonkwo
approves of his influence on Nwoye and grows fond of Ikemefuna himself.
Ikemefuna soon starts to call Okonkwo “father.”
After three years, when the oldest man of the tribe, Ezeudu, informs Okonkwo
that Ikemefuna must be killed, he advises him not to participate in the killing,
since “the boy calls you father.” Okonkwo ignores this advice, fearing that others
will find him weak or effeminate, and he proceeds to strike the killing blow when
they take Ikemefuna out to be killed the next day.
Soon, Ezeudu passes away, and his funeral celebration draws the entire clan.
During the burial, Okonkwo's gun explodes, killing Ezeudu's 16-year-old son.
Having killed a fellow clansman, Okonkwo has no choice but to flee the clan with
his family. Because the crime is a “female,” or accidental, crime, they may return
in seven years.
During their time in exile, Okonkwo and his family work hard to start a new farm
in Okonkwo's motherland, Mbanta. His mother's kinsmen treat them kindly, but
Okonkwo is extremely discouraged by the circumstances. He plans for the day he
can return to his rightful place in Umuofia.
While he works in Mbanta, the white men begin to appear among neighboring
clans, causing stories to spread about their power and destruction. When they
finally arrive in Mbanta though, the clan is fascinated but finds their religion
ridiculous. Nwoye, however, is captivated by the hymn he hears on the first day,
and soon joins the Christians to get away from his father, who is outraged.
When Okonkwo finally returns to Umuofia, the white men have changed his clan
as well. Mr. Brown, a white missionary who is popular for his patience and
understanding approach, has built a school and hospital, and many clan
members are enrolling their children in the school so that they can one day
become clerks or teachers. However, soon after Okonkwo's return, Mr. Brown
leaves the country due to health reasons, and Reverend Smith replaces him.
Reverend Smith is uncompromising, encouraging acts among the converted clan
members that provoke the rest of the clan. When Enoch, a fanatical convert, rips
the mask off of one of the clan's masked egwugwu during a ceremony, the clan
retaliates by burning down the church. Reverend Smith reports this
transgression, and the District Commissioner tricks the clan's leaders into
meeting with him before handcuffing them. The clan leaders, including
Okonkwo, suffer insults and beatings before they are released once the village
pays the fine.
The morning after their release, the clan leaders speak of war before they are
interrupted by the arrival of court messengers. Full of hate, Okonkwo confronts
the leader, who says that the white man commands the meeting to stop. In a
flash, Okonkwo strikes down the messenger with his machete. Seeing that none
of his clansmen support him in his violent action, Okonkwo walks away and
hangs himself.
When the District Commissioner comes to fetch Okonkwo the next day, the
clansmen lead him to his hanging body instead, saying that they cannot touch it,
since it's an abomination for a man to take his own life. The District
Commissioner finds this custom interesting, making note of it for his book on
Nigeria, which he plans to title The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the
Lower Niger.
Character Analysis
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Okonkwo
Okonkwo is a man who values masculinity, strength, and respect above all else.
He is seen as a leader within his clan and his family, which includes three wives
and a number of children.
A man of action, Okonkwo overcomes his poor background and achieves great
success.
Unoka, Okonkwo's father, was lazy and a poor provider, and Okonkwo is driven
to be everything his father was not.
Okonkwo's rigidity causes great harm, first within his family—the killing of
Ikemefuna and the rift with Nwoye—and then within society.
Okonkwo is unable to adapt when the white man/missionaries come to his
village.
He commits suicide rather than adhere to the rules of the changed society.
Unoka
Unoka is viewed by Okonkwo and the clan as lazy, although he was also a gifted
musician and a gentle man.
Rather than working, Unoka preferred to play his flute and drink wine.
He was seen as a coward because he was afraid of war.
He had poor harvests because he was unwilling to put in the effort to care for the
land.
When Unoka died, he was in debt to all of his neighbors.
Okonkwo cannot see his father's good qualities and hates him.
He lives his life with the intention of avoiding anything his father enjoyed.
Ikemefuna
Ikemefuna comes to the clan as a form of payment for a murder that one of his
tribesmen committed.
The elders place Ikemefuna with Okonkwo, who puts his first wife in charge of
the boy.
Ikemefuna misses his family but comes to feel at home in Umuofia.
He becomes popular within the family, particularly with Okonkwo's oldest son,
Nwoye.
Okonkwo is also fond of Ikemefuna, though he does not reveal his feelings and
eventually participates in Ikemefuna's murder.
Nwoye
Nwoye seems to have adopted some of Unoka's traits, which upsets Okonkwo.
Okonkwo worries that Nwoye will grow up behaving as his grandfather behaved.
Because of his concern, Okonkwo is even harder on Nwoye and beats him
regularly.
Nwoye begins to change under the influence of Ikemefuna.
When Ikemefuna is killed, Nwoye retreats into himself and is cut off from his
father.
With the arrival of the missionaries, Nwoye revives.
He breaks away from his father and becomes a Christian convert.
Ekwefi
Obierika
Themes
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The title of the book refers to the pressure that the clan faces from the arrival of white
men and missionaries. The colonizers bring a new religion and court system and give
little consideration to how Igbo society previously functioned. They assume that the clan
is without culture and living in a haphazard manner, in need of enlightenment.
Yet the clan has a fully functioning society that includes traditions and holidays. Vibrant
celebrations mark the beginning and ending of the harvest season, while detailed rituals
accompany both weddings and funerals. They have a justice process, and their culture is
rich in music, dance, folktales, and proverbs.
Changes come about rapidly when the white men and missionaries arrive. The impact of
the changes is negligible at first, but it grows and begins to dominate the clan. Outcasts
are the first to abandon traditions and adapt to change.
Even the clan leaders eventually recognize that they are unable to stop the
changes. Okonkwo is the only member left who refuses to alter his beliefs and behavior.
His refusal to adapt leads to tragedy and to his suicide—the ultimate transgression
against his beliefs.
Okonkwo works hard to become a wealthy and respected leader of the clan and is said to
have overcome his chi. He lives life on his own terms by exercising free will. However,
when he accidentally kills Ezeudu's son and is forced into exile, he curses his fate. He
now believes that fate—not free will—rules his destiny. This change in belief will affect
him later, after his arrest and release in Umuofia.
Betrayal
According to Okonkwo, the men of the clan should resist the incursions of the white
man and use their Igbo warrior skills to drive the missionaries from their territory. In
Okonkwo's eyes, the clan responds to these foreigners with passivity rather than
strength. He sees the clan's acceptance of the missionaries as a betrayal of the clan's
tradition and of their warlike ancestors.
His son's departure from the clan makes Okonkwo wonder how a man could abandon
the gods of his father. This, Okonkwo believes, is the ultimate betrayal.
Symbols
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Achebe uses symbolism throughout the book to strengthen its central themes and ideas.
Fire
Okonkwo's rage is never far from the surface. The narrator mentions that "whenever he
could not get his words out quickly enough, he would use his fists."
As Okonkwo reflects on the loss of Nwoye in Chapter 24, he acknowledges that even the
most powerful fire produces cold, useless ash. In this statement Okonkwo refers to
himself as a fire—both strong and fierce—while he sees Nwoye as ash—weak and lazy. At
the end of the novel, Okonkwo succumbs to his rage and kills the court messenger,
leading to his own downfall.
Yams
Yams are grown by Igbo men and symbolize masculinity, wealth, and
respect. Okonkwo begins to increase his stature in the clan after he borrows and plants
yam seeds in Chapter 3.
Locusts
The locusts represent the arrival of the white man and missionaries. In Chapter 15, the
Oracle states directly that the white men are locusts.
In Chapter 7, actual locusts arrive in the village, appearing as a cloud blocking the
sunlight. Throngs of them descend, and "the whole country [becomes] the brown-earth
color of the vast, hungry swarm." Okonkwo and the others view the locusts as a delicacy
and munch on them happily. This appearance—and enjoyment by the clansmen—of the
real insects strengthens the symbolism used in Chapter 15.
In Chapter 15, one white missionary comes to the area. Told by the Oracle that the white
man will spread destruction, the people kill the man. He is soon followed by many more
foreigners, until their presence is felt in all the villages. Like locusts, they bring benefits
—education and medicine—yet they also devour the clan's traditions and culture.
Summary
The story is set in the fictional village of Umuofia, Nigeria, in the late 1890s. Okonkwo,
the protagonist, is a member of the Igbo tribe (spelled Ibo in the novel), an ethnic group
that resides in nine villages by the lower Niger River in Southern Nigeria.
Years ago Okonkwo gained fame because of his wrestling exploits. He has since become
a successful farmer with a large family, including three wives.
Readers learn that Unoka, Okonkwo's father, was a lazy man who enjoyed music and
talking. People did not respect him, and his family struggled. Unoka owed money to all
of his neighbors and had no intention of paying his debts. His indebtedness left
Okonkwo ashamed.
Analysis
This chapter opens the first of three parts of the novel. In Part 1, readers meet Okonkwo,
the novel's larger-than-life protagonist, and gain a sense of his almost mythic
reputation. Achebe also provides a thorough introduction to Igbo culture before the
devastating effects of colonialism.
In Chapter 1, readers become acquainted with both Okonkwo and the person whose
behavior has shaped Okonkwo's character: his despised father, Unoka. The chapter
presents these details about Okonkwo:
In the following 20 years, Okonkwo's fame and stature have grown. His status as
a successful farmer and war hero with civic titles and three wives makes him "one
of the greatest men of his time" in the eyes of his clan and in his own eyes. His
jaunty step makes it appear that he walks "on springs."
Why, then, does Okonkwo so readily resort to violence? He has no patience, particularly
"with unsuccessful men." It's no coincidence that the most unsuccessful man in
Okonkwo's life is his father, Unoka. Although Unoka has been dead for 10 years, he still
influences Okonkwo's life. Readers learn the following about Unoka:
A gifted flute player and lover of wine, Unoka was happiest when playing music.
Successful in music, Unoka was a failure at the practical aspects of life. He was
lazy and provided little food for his family.
He was in debt to everyone and, though he kept a record of his debts, did not
repay the people who lent him money.
Okonkwo was ashamed of his father, and that shame drives him as an adult.
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Summary
Night has fallen, and the clan is notified of a town meeting taking place the next
morning. It is a quiet night, as the nights without moonlight are in Umuofia. The
narrator notes that "darkness held a vague terror for these people."
Okonkwo thinks the meeting might be a call to war. He had previously proven himself in
warfare, having brought home five human heads as battle trophies.
At the meeting, Ezeugo, a powerful orator, explains that a clanswoman has been killed
by someone from Mbaino. Clan members decide to send a delegate to Mbaino to
negotiate. The people of Mbaino will have the choice of offering Umuofia a young man
and a virgin as payment for the loss—or waging war.
The narrator notes that Umuofia is "powerful in war and in magic" and is therefore
feared by its neighbors. The clan goes to war only if its Oracle declares the war just.
Okonkwo is chosen as the negotiator. When he goes to the potential enemy to review the
terms, he is treated with great honor and respect. Soon he brings home the virgin and a
young boy—Ikemefuna. Given the responsibility to care for Ikemefuna, Okonkwo
entrusts his first wife to look after the frightened and homesick young boy.
Readers learn that Okonkwo "rules his household with a heavy hand." His wives and
children "live in perpetual fear of his fiery temper." Okonkwo's life is dominated by fear
—particularly the fear that he will end up like his father. He has a lot of energy and
works hard, which enables him to grow wealthy. Nwoye, Okonkwo's oldest son, is unlike
his father. Okonkwo says he is lazy, and he tries to correct him "by constant nagging and
beating."
Analysis
Okonkwo's intensity and heavy-handedness are revealed to be a cover-up for his "fear of
failure and of weakness." In his drive to succeed and deserve the respect of his clan,
Okonkwo vows never to be gentle or idle, because that is how his father was. All of
Okonkwo's traits and behavior are dictated by his determination to be the opposite of
his father.
Okonkwo is the clear ruler in his household. He regularly beats his wives and
children, and they are afraid of him.
Preferring action to conversation, he is not interested in having to explain himself
to anyone. When his first wife asks him a question, he answers, "Do what you are
told, woman." He adds that she is not one of the elders. Thus, he reflects the
patriarchal hierarchy of the tribe.
Okonkwo is comfortable with the clan's rules of conduct, as the clan has a clear
set of behaviors that apply to war.
Here readers see that the anger and fear that drive Okonkwo to be so hard on his family
allow him to be successful at war and respected by his fellow clan members. These
character traits, however, allow him success only within his Igbo culture; they will create
increasing conflict for him as the culture is gradually annihilated by imperialism.
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Summary
The narrative in this chapter takes readers back into Okonkwo's past. When Okonkwo is
a boy, his father, Unoka, consults Agbala, the Oracle of the Hills and the Caves, to
discover why his crops always fail. People confer with Agbala's priestess because no one
ever sees the god himself. The priestess, as surrogate for the god, screams, "Go home
and work like a man." Unoka's fate is determined by his bad chi, or personal god. Unoka
develops a swelling in his stomach and limbs, which is considered an offense against the
earth goddess. Because of this, he is left to die in the Evil Forest.
That year the rains were late, and a blazing sun blistered the land. Thus, "the harvest
was sad, like a funeral," because the crops failed. The memory of that year sends a shiver
up Okonkwo's spine. His survival confirms his ability, however, to overcome all
obstacles, natural and manmade.
Analysis
As readers learn details of Okonkwo's start in farming, they become more aware of the
determination that drives his success, including his "fear of his father's contemptible life
and shameful death." Even the local priestess knows that Unoka, Okonkwo's father, is
lazy. Unoka's illness and death in the Evil Forest represent his failings in life.
From an early age Okonkwo is dedicated to the Igbo tradition of hard work and the idea
that raising yams is a man's job. The fact that he has no inheritance from his father
simply makes him more determined to succeed. When bad weather destroys his first
crops, the experience further develops his character and serves as an inspiration for the
future. He believes that by exercising his will, he can overcome fate.
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Summary
Ikemefuna is homesick and won't eat. Okonkwo forces food on the boy, who then vomits
and is ill for three weeks. Once recovered, Ikemefuna seems over his sadness. Soon he
becomes a favorite with Nwoye and other family members. Even Okonkwo is fond of
him, but he does not show it.
Before planting their crops, the Igbo observe the Week of Peace, during which no one is
to "say a harsh word to his neighbor" or to commit physical abuse. During the Week of
Peace, Ojiugo, Okonkwo's third wife, leaves the compound to plait her hair without
preparing food for the family. Enraged, Okonkwo beats her, violating the holiday in a
serious transgression against the clan's religious beliefs. Ezeani, the priest of Ani, the
earth goddess, reminds Okonkwo that they need Ani's blessing for their crops to grow.
He commands Okonkwo to bring a sacrifice to the shrine.
When the holiday ends, each family clears land and prepares yams for planting. Nwoye
and Ikemefuna help Okonkwo. He is deliberately tough on them. The two boys have
grown close, and Ikemefuna now feels like a family member.
Analysis
In this chapter, the narrator, having related how Okonkwo's past has influenced his
character, brings readers to the present day in Okonkwo's village.
Okonkwo has already shown he has little patience with people who are less successful
than he is. When he interacts with such an individual, his impatience often emerges as
brusqueness—as it does at a village meeting where he disrespects Osugo. Okonkwo is
concerned about the opinions of others and is now taken to task by other clansmen, who
remind him not to "forget to be humble."
Okonkwo has no trouble venting his anger. Beating his wife during the Week of Peace
seems justifiable to him until the priest points out that this transgression "can ruin the
whole clan." Okonkwo is inwardly repentant, but his constant battle of strength versus
weakness does not allow him to admit that he has made a mistake.
Okonkwo enters into the routine of yam-planting season with gusto. The skills needed
for growing yams are crucial to success—a success that he wants Nwoye to share in.
Although Ikemefuna and Nwoye are too young to take in the details of preparing seed-
yams, Okonkwo wants to crush signs of laziness in Nwoye and instructs both boys with
his usual harshness.
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Summary
Now it is time for the Feast of the New Yam. The celebration includes giving thanks to
the earth goddess, feasting with relatives, and enjoying the great wrestling match. "Men
and women, young and old, looked forward to the New Yam Festival," the narrator says.
Okonkwo is happier working and does not enjoy feasts. Still, he hosts his large family
and insists everything be prepared properly. His second wife, Ekwefi, bears the brunt of
his foul mood as he finds a reason to beat her. He then nearly kills her when she mocks
his poor aim as a hunter. He shoots at her with his gun but misses.
Ekwefi particularly enjoys the festival's wrestling contest. Each year the contest reminds
her of the time long ago when she fell in love with Okonkwo. He had won the match—
and her heart—in "the greatest contest within living memory." Although they did not
marry then, she later left her husband to become Okonkwo's wife.
Ezinma, Ekwefi's daughter, calls her mother by her first name. The two converse as if
they are equals. Okonkwo is especially fond of Ezinma but rarely shows it.
Analysis
This chapter paints a picture of one of Umuofia's most important festivals, the Feast of
the New Yam. Held just prior to the yam harvest, the festival is a time of relative
inactivity for Igbo men.
Okonkwo, however, cannot cope with idleness. Nervous energy builds and explodes
when he finds an outlet in beating Ekwefi. Wife beating is tolerated in his culture. Once
again the actions motivated by Okonkwo's anger do not put him in conflict as long as he
is in balance with Igbo traditions.
Readers learn more about Ekwefi in this chapter. In leaving her husband to become
Okonkwo's wife, she shows an independence and desire that is unique among the
women of Umuofia. Her daughter, Ezinma, has similar traits and is also beautiful like
her mother.
The chapter is the first to mention guns, a symbol of Western culture. Okonkwo's
inexperience with handling a gun will present a conflict for him later in the novel as
well.
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Summary
The villagers gather at the ilo, or village square, to watch the wrestling matches. Early
matches feature boys who are 15 and 16. One particular match excites the crowd,
including Okonkwo. The victor is Maduka, the son of Okonkwo's friend Obierika.
During intermission, people chat. Ekwefi speaks with Chielo, a widow who has two
children. Chielo is also the priestess of Agbala. Chielo is fond of Ezinma and asks about
her. Ekwefi says of Ezinma, "Perhaps she has come to stay." Chielo responds that
children "usually stay if they do not die before the age of six."
The primary wrestling match is a lengthy affair that looks as if it will end in a draw.
Finally one wrestler makes a tactical mistake and loses the match.
Analysis
Although Okonkwo is generally interested only in work and warfare, here he relaxes and
enjoys the spectacle. He has built much of his reputation on the strength of his past
wrestling championship. Watching the matches not only relaxes but also invigorates
him, as it plays to his own beliefs and skills. In this setting Okonkwo behaves just as
everyone else does. His passion for wrestling is clear, and he is in his element.
The seating at the match, with men on stools in front and women in the back, is an
indicator of Umuofia's patriarchal society and its effect on Okonkwo, his wives, and his
children. The sexes are separate and not equal.
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Summary
Analysis
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Summary
Analysis
This chapter deals with the emotional aftermath of Ikemefuna's
murder. Okonkwo drinks as a form of escape but cannot rid himself of guilt.
Enzima's presence comforts him.
He sees in his daughter a strength that is missing in his other children, except
Ikemefuna.
This disturbing realization reawakens his guilt.
Okonkwo's connection with Nwoye is clearly broken.
While Nwoye comes to Okonkwo when he is called for, he leaves as soon as
possible.
Nwoye does not want to be near his father.
Obierika seems an unlikely companion for Okonkwo.
Although they are on the same social and economic level, Obierika does not feel
the same compulsion toward masculinity.
Readers learn that a fear of appearing weak would not influence Obierika to assist
in the killing of his son.
He disagrees with Okonkwo's killing of Ikemefuna.
This is the first time that the concept of white men is introduced in the novel.
The comparison to lepers, people with a disease that causes skin sores and nerve
damage, is apt.
The white men will destroy the villagers' culture just as leprosy destroys its
victims.
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Crowds have assembled at the ilo (an open space where village gatherings are
held) to view a trial that is taking place.
Nine egwugwu (masked village elders who impersonate/represent ancient spirits
of the clan) act as judges. The nine egwugwu are "the most powerful and most
secret of the clan." Each represents a village of the clan.
A man claims that his wife's relatives kidnapped his wife and children.
He says he went to his in-laws and asked them to return his bride-price as called
for by the law of the clan.
The wife's family admits that all of this is true.
However, they say the man beat his wife every day during the nine years they
were married.
One beating nearly killed her.
They say she should not have to pay the money, because she fled to save her life.
The egwugwu instruct the man to go to his in-laws and beg to have his wife
return.
They advise the wife's family to accept his request.
Analysis
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Chapter 13 | Summary
Summary
Umuofia awakes to the news that Ezeudu, the clansman who told Okonkwo not to
participate in Ikemefuna's execution, has died. "A cold shiver [runs] down
Okonkwo's back" as he recalls the warning.
Ezeudu was the oldest man in his village and had achieved the rare
accomplishment of taking three titles.
Drums are beaten, and guns and cannon are fired. Before his final rite, "the
tumult increased tenfold." Words are spoken in tribute. The tumult continues
and reaches "fever-heat."
Okonkow joins other funeral guests who shoot their guns in a salute to Ezeudu.
However, his gun explodes, and the shrapnel kills Ezeudu's 16-year-old son.
Killing a clan member is an offense against the earth goddess.
Okonkwo must flee, but since the killing was accidental, he will be allowed to
return to the clan after seven years.
Gathering their most valuable belongings, he and his family go to his mother's
village, Mbanta.
Soon Ezeudu's neighbors storm Okonkwo's compound and destroy it,
symbolically cleansing the land that Okonkwo has soiled with their clansman's
blood.
One of the men is Obierika, who questions the traditional cleansing ritual
because the killing was an accident.
Analysis
Chapter 13 concludes the first part of the novel, ending with an event that is
unthinkable to Okonkwo—his exile from the village.
Okonkwo cannot escape the killing of Ikemefuna.
The death of Ezeudu, who warned Okonkwo against harming Ikemefuna, is a
reminder, and it foreshadows yet another killing that Okonkwo commits.
This killing—at Ezeudu's funeral—is unintentional.
While Okonkwo continues to feel guilt for the intentional murder, an exercise of
free will, he suffers no outward repercussions.
However, the unintentional crime causes a great upheaval in his life.
Once again, his inexperience with guns leads to conflict.
This crime of killing Ezeudu's son is considered "female" because it was
inadvertent, an act of fate.
Yet Okonkwo has offended the earth goddess and must pay for the offense.
The narrator points out that nothing like this crime has ever happened in the
village.
The tribe uses violence as a form of expression.
At the burial of Ezeudu, clansmen brandish machetes and shoot guns and
cannons; after the man's son is killed, the men destroy Okonkwo's compound.
It is controlled violence and done for a ceremonial purpose.
Chapter 14 | Summary
Summary
This new beginning requires hard work, which Okonkwo is always willing to do.
Yet it no longer sparks the enthusiasm that Okonkwo once had.
His goal had been to become one of the lords of the clan, and he was on the path
to achieving it. However, the goal now seems very far away.
Analysis
Uchendu notes that everyone suffers but that they must go on.
He believes that Okonkwo is fortunate to have the support system of his
motherland.
Chapter 15 | Summary
Summary
Obierika pays a visit in the second year of Okonkwo's exile, and the two men go to
speak with Uchendu.
Uchendu notes that men in his day "had friends in distant clans,"
Obierika tells them the Abame clan has been wiped out. A white man had
appeared in the village. When the Oracle was consulted, he declared that the man
"would break their clan and spread destruction among them." The Oracle warned
that other white men would follow. He called them locusts. Clan members then
killed the man.
Uchendu asks what the stranger said. At first, he is told that the man said
nothing. Actually, the stranger had spoken, but he was not understood.
Later, Obierika tells them, some "ordinary men like us" led three white men to
the clan. The men saw the stranger's bicycle tied to a tree. They left, returned with
reinforcements, and, surrounding the market in Abame, shot everyone there.
Uchendu says, "Never kill a man who says nothing. Those men of Abame were
fools." Okonkwo agrees. He says they should have armed themselves and been
ready for danger.
The chapter closes with an example of Okonkwo allowing his emotions to show,
although in a subtle fashion.
Analysis
The white man has arrived in Abame, and the Oracle says that more white men
are on their way. Language is a barrier, as the villagers cannot understand the
man, nor does he understand them.
Using a metaphor, the Oracle calls the white men locusts. Their appearance
foreshadowed the event that is now happening, the arrival of the first
missionaries.
The locusts represent the paradox of colonialism: the advancement they bring
through education and medicine comes at the cost of the oppression of
indigenous people and the eradication of their culture. Achebe's use of locusts to
symbolize destruction can be compared to the locusts' appearance as one of 10
plagues against Egypt in the Bible (Exodus 10:1–20).
Okonkwo suggests that the men of Abame should have armed themselves "even
when they went to market." Typically, his initial reaction is to fight. This goes
against the clan's established practice of turning to violence only as a last resort.
Readers see that, although there are many appearances of male bonding in the
novel, Obierika is the one man with whom Okonkwo is truly connected.
Chapter 16 | Summary
Summary
However, Okonkwo won't discuss his son, so Obierika learns from Nwoye's
mother how Nwoye became intrigued by the missionaries. Initially, one white
man and six converts came to Mbanta. The white man had a commanding
presence and spoke through an interpreter. He declared that the Igbo gods were
"pieces of wood and stone" and went on to talk about the Holy Trinity.
Okonkwo, who had been hoping the conversation with the missionaries would
lead to a fight, walked away, thinking they were crazy. Nwoye, however, was
fascinated. The hymn they sang "seemed to answer a vague and persistent
question that haunted his young soul."
Analysis
Okonkwo is mentioned in this chapter but plays no active role in it. The purpose
of the chapter is to document Nwoye's fascination with the missionaries and his
joining the church. His attitudes and beliefs have driven him apart from
Okonkwo. After joining the missionaries, Nwoye is asked about his father, to
which he replies, "I don't know. He is not my father."
Readers see that Nwoye and Obierika have some similarities. Both question the
way their society functions. Obierika, having a better understanding of the young
man than Okonkwo does, encourages his friend to be patient with Nwoye.
However, as the story has shown repeatedly, Okonkwo has no patience.
The missionaries have spread just as the locusts did. The first man was a
harbinger, like the first swarm of locusts. However, the missionaries cannot be
killed off and are slowly infiltrating the clan.
Chapter 17 | Summary
Summary
The missionaries have been preaching in the Mbanta marketplace. Now they
request land and receive a plot in the Evil Forest that the villagers believe is filled
"with sinister forces." No one expects the missionaries to accept the land. The
elders are convinced the missionaries do not know what they are doing and that
they will fail miserably.
After the missionaries build their church, the villagers wait for their gods and
ancestors to take revenge. They expect the gods' vengeance to occur within 28
days.
When the 28th day passes and nothing happens, the missionaries win a few more
converts. They include a woman named Nneka, who is pregnant. Her previous
pregnancies resulted in twins—an abomination in the Igbo faith. Those infants
were abandoned to die, and Nneka does not want to risk the same fate.
Nwoye had been attracted to the missionaries from the beginning, but "he dared
not go too near the missionaries ... for fear of his father." When Nwoye does go to
the church, his cousin Amikwu sees him and tells Okonkwo.
Nwoye comes home, and Okonkwo begins to beat him, but Uchendu steps in and
demands the boy's release.
Okonkwo contemplates what has happened with his son, but it makes little sense
to him. After all, Okonkwo is called the "Roaring Flame" for his strength and
boldness. How can Nwoye be so weak and passive? It then occurs to him that
"living fire begets cold, impotent ash." Because Nwoye is his son, this is the
natural order, and he is powerless to do anything about it.
Analysis
The elders and clan leaders believe they are clever to let the missionaries have
land in the Evil Forest. This will surely mean the missionaries are doomed to
failure. The clan's gods and ancestors will strike the missionaries down. Then the
clan can reunite, and faith will be restored. Yet the church is built, and the time of
punishment passes. The Igbo gods have failed to punish the intruders.
In this chapter, however, Okonkwo beats Nwoye for attending church. This may
be one beating too many. Nwoye exercises free will by returning to the church
and deciding to become a student at the church school in Umuofia. The leader of
the Mbanta church, Mr. Kiaga, blesses Nwoye because he "forsakes his father." In
an example of situational irony, Nwoye is returning to Umuofia, Okonkwo's
homeland, to learn skills his father would never dream of teaching him. He has
forsaken Okonkwo's way of life.
Chapter 18 | Summary
Summary
A Christian has killed a python, and the Mbanta leaders gather to decide how to
proceed. The python is a revered animal that the Igbo refer to as "Our
Father." Okonkwo wants to force the missionaries out of the village for this
offense. However, the group decides the matter is between the person who killed
the python and the god.
Okonkwo says this is cowardly and views the clan as womanly, unlike the clan of
his fatherland, Umuofia. His speech causes the clan to decide to ostracize their
Christians.
Then Okoli, the man who is accused of killing the python, falls ill and dies. The
clan sees this as confirmation that "the gods were still able to fight their own
battles." As a result, they decide not to ostracize the Christian clan members.
Analysis
Okonkwo has a foil in Mr. Kiaga. A foil is a character whose qualities contrast
with the qualities of another character (usually the protagonist). This contrast
serves to highlight the main character's qualities. Both Okonkwo and Kiaga are
zealous men with an unwavering vision of how things ought to be. However,
unlike Okonkwo, Mr. Kiaga is able to inspire those around him to believe as he
does.
Chapter 19 | Summary
Summary
Okonkwo gathers his three wives and instructs them to prepare a great feast. The
feast will be his way of thanking his mother's kinsmen.
An old family member makes a speech thanking Okonkwo for the feast, which is
even bigger than they expected. He adds that it is good for kinsmen to gather. The
man confides that he fears for the younger generation and for the clan because of
the "abominable religion that has settled among you."
Analysis
Okonkwo regrets having left Umuofia. He believes the exile has held him back; he
would have prospered even more in Umuofia. Okonkwo also feels more
comfortable in Umuofia because the "men were bold and warlike."