literary strategies- achebe's things fall apart

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Literary Strategies and the use of Language in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart. History: Oral tradition. It is important to firstly understand the historical literary backdrop of Achebe's writings. Nigerian literature has a long history in the oral tradition. Bade Ajuwon's article explains: Pre-literate Nigeria once enjoyed a verbal art civilization which, at its high point, was warmly patronized by traditional rulers and the general public. At a period when writing was unknown, the oral medium served the people as a bank for the preservation of their ancient experiences and beliefs. Although most Nigerians knew and could recount parts of their genealogy and local history, only a few oral artists had the skill and stamina required to chant the lengthy oral literature. The oral artists, freelancers or guild-associates, enjoyed reverence as "keepers of the people's ancient wisdoms and beliefs." These oral artists frequently entertained their audiences dramatically, providing relaxation and teaching moral lessons. In various parts of the country, novels developed around 1930. Centered upon fantastic, magical characters of humans and fairies, Hausa novels, called "non-realistic novels," were based on folktales.Igboland also saw a growth in the number of novelists who expressed the distaste of their people for the Christian missionaries. A major shift in literary style from fantasy to realism resulted from the founding of the University College of Ibadan in 1948. The calls for a new literary style came from scholars educated in the western tradition at the University. Conferences, journals, and newspapers urged the shift to realism. Next question to ask: What made Achebe break away from the oral tradition? Why did he choose the "novel" form to express his ideas and why did he choose English? 1. The novel form had not been well-utilized by African literary scholars to depict the psychology of colonisation from the African point of view. How do we know this? At the time, novel Mister Johnson stood out as one of the few books about Africa. . Achebe saw the Nigerian hero as an "embarrassing nitwit," Achebe detected in the Irish author's descriptions of Nigerians "an undertow of uncharitableness ... a contagion of distaste, hatred, and mockery." Mister Johnson, Achebe writes, "open[ed] my eyes to the fact that my home was

under attack and that my home was not merely a house or a town but, more importantly, an awakening story." That was the instigater. By Joyce Carey. Why English? He insiststhat he writein English not to attract a wide international audience, but simply because he had been educated in English. But he adds that his use of English was inspired by his Igbo background. Fanon quotes Michel Leiris, who supports Achebe's view. " Their (negros) intellectual growth took place almost exclusively within the framework of the French (in Achebe's case, it is English) language, and it would be artifice for them to resort to a mode of speech that they virtually never use now except as something learned." It's like questioning Amitav Ghosh as to why he writes patriotic literature in the colonizer's language. One way to answer this is because English is the langauge he finds more comfortable since he has been educated through its medium. The very title of the novel comes from "The Second Coming", which is a poem by Yeats, a poem that was taught in the university Achebe attended. Education then, was one of the reasons Achebe picked English as a means of expression. That's one way of looking at it, the author's perspective. Let's get into the colonized Negro's psychology when he toils to master the mother language, in this case it being English. Analysing Fanon's argument; he says: To speak a language is to take on a world, a culture. The Antilles Neegro who wants to be white will be whiter as he gains greater mastery of teh cultural tool that language is. Every colonized people, in other words, every people in whose soul an inferiority complex has been created by the death and burial of its local cultural originality- finds itself face to face with the language of teh civilizing nation, that is, with the culture of the mother country. The colonized is elevated above his jungle status in proportion to his adoption of the mother country's cultural standards. He becomes whiter as he renounces his blackness, his jungle. Clearly, teh adoption of English by Achebe is seen as a product of a psychological inferiority complex by Fanon. Further, Fanon says that "when the negro adopts a language different from that of a group into which he was borrn is evidence of a dislocation, a separation. The negro's inferiority complex is particularly intensified among the most educated, who must struggle with it unceasingly."

Question now to ask is: Is Achebe's literature dislocated? Has a "separation" from the original Igbo culture occured? Fanon argues that even if in content and matter, teh novel rewrites African history, the use of English by Achebe is problematic for the reasons stated previously. Section 3: Achebe's new literary "form" as devisedin Things Fall Apart. Achebe has rightly been credited for developing techniques through which he expands, complicates, or disturbs the European novel form, and these techniques frequently can be seen as incorporations of African cultural practices, From the title through to the end of the novel, Achebe integrates and appropriates a mixture of traditional African and modern Western cultural and literary elements. Achebe writes in English, the language of the colonizer, but incorporates idioms, proverbs, and imagery that invoke the Igbo tradition and culture into his prose in order to convey the experience of African society under colonization and to force the reader to accept the story he tells on his own terms. Achebe writes:ince Igbo people did not construct a rigid and closely argued system of thought to explain the universe and the place of man in it, preferring the metaphor of myth and poetry, anyone seeking an insight into their world must seek it along their own way. Some of these ways are folk tales, proverbs, proper names, rituals, songs, and festivals". Achebe combines of oral narrative practiceswih novelistic devices and structures, thereby creating a new "form" of the novel. it deploys a European genre, the English language,and the medium of print. Let's look at the Igbo words used: Agbala - woman, or man without title Chi - personal spirit [explain these two only} Egwugwu -- Foo-foo ,Harmattan, Ilo , Jigida, Obi,Ogene Osu - Ozo Uli. Notice that these words do not have direct counterparts in the English language. By retaining the dialect through the use of these words, Achebe manages to not only refresh his cultural identity, he also highlights and reveals the richness of his language to the European reader. Further, complex customs are also described in the novel. Practices like: Dry Season,Egwugwu ceremony, Engagement ceremony, Funeral ceremony, Evil Forest Feast of the New Year, Palm-wine tapping, Polygamy, The concept of Titles Achebe depicts a society that is highly structured and layered. the novel presents not onlythe portrait of an individual but also the portrait of a village, and indeed a wholecivilization.

Section 5: Conclusion: Analysis of the rewrting of African history

through narrative. Achebes declared intention is teach [his] readers that their pastwith all its imperfectionswas not one long night of savagery from which the Europeans acting on Gods behalf delivered them The pre-colonial history of Igboland is depicted in painstaking detail. Achebe shows both sides of the coin. Taking teh trope of gender for example, Achebe illustrates that while women have tehir own living space and unhappy wives can leave their husbands, wife beating is a common practice, feminine and weak are synonymous. Further, Igboland has a complex legal structure, with crimes divided into male and female, strict proceedings against murder of a clansman, punitive measures against those disturbing the week of Peace. However, the shortcomings of this system are also highlighted, the killing of Ikemefuna being the prime example. Ikemefuna is killed because of the actions of a few members of his community, the punishment is misdirected as the real killers of the woman go scotsfree. Thirdly, religion is painted as highly layered, with it dictating the everyday lives of the people. Igbo religion is well embellished with customs and lengthy ceremonies and people have an innate belief in its workings. The shortcomings of such a religion however are that ALL the fringe characters of teh novel, Nwoye and the unhappy wife for example, are teh first recruits of teh missionaries. How a society and culture treats its fringe actors helps one critique the society accurately. Clearly, Igbo religion does not satisfy the minority groups and this is one of the reasons why Cristianity was embraced. The European conception ofIgbo society is reductive. This is clear from teh ending of the novel where Okonkwo's story merits a meagre paragraph in the Commisioner's book:The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of thelower Niger. The Title of the book itself provides us with a lens in order view the European mndset. The use of the words "primitive" and "pacification" clearly highlights allusions to teh percieved "Darkness" and savagery of Africa and the selfimposed burdnof Europe and teh christian White man to educate and eliminate the savagery. Such a view is contested in the novel. Achebes novel shows us that a traditional, oral storytelling culture such as the Igbo experiences its own uncertainty about the meaning of events, and his satiric representation of Christianity reminds us that contemporary Western culture has its own superstitions and beliefs in higher powers. This juxtaposition of both European and Ibo culture helps the reader to objectively analyze Ibo history. Achebe is succesful in enlargening the lens through which African history is viewed by the Europeans. He critiques as well as apreciates both cultures through depiction. The politicization of a such a move cannot go unnoticed. Achebe strives to

"repaint" mindsets and he does so through the medium of English, using the medium of print. He not only rewrites the cultural history of Africa but contributes to the reconstruction of its literary history also. Bibliography: Nigerian Literature: Oral and Written Traditions, Laura C.Gardner. An African Voice, Atlantic Unbound interview. Okonkwo and the Storyteller: Death, Accident, and Meaning in Achebe and Benjamin,Jonathan Greenberg On Color Prejudice, From Black skin, White skins : Franz Fanon. Text: Things Fall Apart.