preview

Gender Roles In Things Fall Apart

Good Essays

Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe was first published in 1959, but has been reprinted several times since then. It follows the life of Okonkwo, a proud Igbo man who can not flourish under his culture, or that of the Christian missionaries that settle in his village.
The story is told in a third person narrative, and it is told in the past tense. The narrator is omniscient, although the reader is presented primarily with glimpses into the protagonist’s mind, only occasionally seeing other people’s thoughts when they are relevant. Gender is one of the major themes of the book. The Igbo people follow very rigid gender roles. However, even in a strict society like the one in Umofia, there are deviants. One of Okonkwo’s wives was brave and …show more content…

His father was lazy and idle. He chose to spend his days playing the flute instead of working on his farm. He harvested what he sewed, and in a culture where hard work was the only way to succeed, his behavior meant bringing shame to his household. Okonkwo’s father was key to his son’s character. He was so ashamed of his father that he devoted himself to becoming the opposite of what his father had been. He became a stoic man who ruled his household with an iron fist. He built his own legacy from the ground up, having been left with nothing after his fathers death. He owes all his assets to his own hard work, and he takes pride in his personal achievements. He is famous both for his wrestling ability and his sudden rise to wealth and power. In his culture, femininity is equivalent to weakness. He takes drastic measures to ensure that he never comes off as being effeminate. This is probably due to the shame he felt on behalf of his father, who had been called a woman for holding no rank in the tribe. His father’s failure haunts him to such an extent that he refuses to show any emotion outwardly. The reader gets glimpses into his thoughts, and knows that he experiences a number of complex feelings despite his stoic appearance. In this sense, he is his own antagonist as well, since he spends his whole life suppressing his true being. A more obvious antagonist, however, is the white man who invades the Igbo

Get Access