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Gender Roles In Things Fall Apart By Chinua Achebe

Decent Essays

With the arrival of third-wave feminism, gender roles are an increasingly popular topic for discussion, and literature is an effective catalyst for it. This is shown through Chinua Achebe´s 1958 novel Things Fall Apart, which discusses the effects of European colonization on African society, using a fictional group of Igbo villages as an example. His main character is Okonkwo, an aggressive and powerful male figure in the community. He is a prime example of how male gender expectations can negatively affect people. As Achebe states, “fiction [is] entirely fictitious [but] it could also be true or false, not with the truth or falsehood of a news article but as to its disinterestedness, its intention, its integrity” (Franklin 3). Clearly, he writes with the purpose of conveying truths through the broader untruth of fiction, and so could not have unintentionally created a character with such problems that are glaringly caused by gender roles. The way that Okonkwo embodies stereotypical gender expectations for men makes clear how they can be toxic to everyone. To effectively discuss anything, gender roles included, central terms need to be defined. Achebe sets this up for the reader in the beginning of the novel, to construct a basis on which to evaluate further as plot events unfold. He talks about Okonkwo “encourag[ing] the boys to sit with him in his obi, and [telling] them stories of the land- masculine stories of violence and bloodshed. Nwoye [,Okonkwo’s son,] kn[ows]

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