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Gender Roles In Things Fall Apart

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“Even as a little boy he had resented his father’s failure and weakness, and even now he still remembered how he had suffered when a playmate had told him that his father was agbala. That was how Okonkwo first came to know that agbala was not only another name for a woman, it could also mean a man who had taken to title.” This quote, taken from Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart” (1959), depicts almost the whole idea of gender roles in the entire book. Women are weak, men are strong. A man with no power is called a woman. But is this the only interpretation of women in the book? Don’t they have any other roles throughout the events of the story? If so, what subliminal portrayal of women comes out of the whole analysis of the story’s gender roles? Throughout “Thing Fall Apart”, women are referred to as the beholders of domestic jobs (cooking, cleaning and tending to children’s and …show more content…

Ani was described as a powerful spirit that is very valuable to the village for if one is to enrage the goddess, their whole plantation would be ruined for God knows how long. She is, in short, the controller of the existence of life in the village. Achebe states that, “she was the ultimate judge of morality and conduct. And what more, she was in close communion with the departed fathers of the clan whose bodies had been committed to earth.” (Achebe, 1959). The village of Igbo is well- known for its yam harvest, and honoring the Week of Peace will lead to a perfect harvest and Ani will be pleased. When Okonkwo beats his wife during that week, he destroys peace and causes the threat of the whole village to lose their crops that year. For that (and many other things) he was exiled for seven years from the clan. This shows the authority and power of women in the village and how Ani has the control over not only the earth, but also the fate of people who disrupt the

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