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Africa Lives: Things Fall Apart

 
A Nigerian tribal dance is performed for BBC TV in 1949
A Nigerian tribal dance is performed for BBC TV in 1949

What's Your Opinion?

How do you react to Achebe's book? And, more broadly, what has been your experience of African literature? Join the Things Fall Apart debate.

My Life In Kenya

As the second of our Africa Lives book, this month we turn our attention to Out Of Africa.

Africa lives on the BBC

African School is just one of a whole season of programmes across the BBC - on TV, on radio, online. Discover Africa with Africa Lives.

African School

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Related programme

As the Book Club's contribution to the Africa Lives season, we're featuring two books looking at Africa from different angles. Next month, Out of Africa, but for June, Stephanie Forward introduces Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart

Things Fall Apart was published in 1959 by the Nigerian author Chinua Achebe. In part it was written as a response to offensive texts about Africa, which typically portrayed its people as primitive beings speaking pidgin English. Achebe felt particularly indignant about Joyce Cary’s ‘Mister Johnson’, with its depiction of a ‘comic’ African figure, and he also disliked Joseph Conrad’s ‘Heart of Darkness’.

Achebe’s novel is set in the 1890s, and concerns the clash in Nigeria between white colonialists and the indigenous folk. The story of the hero, Okonkwo, is powerful and moving. He is an influential and well-respected man in his own community, but cannot cope with the changes imposed upon his people. Okonkwo is also a tragic figure in the true classical sense, because there is a definite flaw in his own personality which contributes to his downfall.

This important work informed the outside world about African cultures and traditions; however Achebe also wanted to remind Africans themselves to treasure their precious heritage. It is significant that he deliberately chose to write Things Fall Apart in English. He could have opted for a native language, as a form of protest, but he intended Westerners to read his novel and learn from it. Achebe’s characters actually use an elevated diction, integrating Igbo vocabulary, and conveying to us a sense of their beautiful, intricate speech. Folktales, proverbs and songs are woven into the text.

Incidentally the title Things Fall Apart is from The Second Coming by W.B. Yeats, so you may like to look at the poem as well as the novel.

Content last updated: 27/05/2005

 

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