Thursday, May 30, 2019

Essay on the Role of Women in Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart

The Role of Women in Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart explores the struggle between old traditions within the Igbo community as well as Christianity and the second coming it brings forth. While on the surface, it appears the novel narrows its focus to a single character, Okonkno and his inner battles, one can read deeper into the text edition and find an array of assorted conflicts in the realm on human vs. human, human vs. nature, human vs. society, and society vs. society. For the purposes of this paper I shall focus on the internal ear of human vs. human and human vs. society in the framework of the role of women in Igbo society and how men assign and dictate these roles. I will alike briefly explain the importance of women in terms of motherhood and wifedom. Throughout my research Ive encountered numerous papers on the rights women do have in Igbo society, on the importance of women in this society. They site the role of widows in Igbo society as well as t he respect given to the first wife as test copy that while this society is not an ideal situation for women, it is hardly the misogynist society that some make it out to be. I passionately disagree. It is obvious to me that to the characters in Things Fall Apart, women are things to be exploited, abused and to serve as second-class citizens to the rank of male privilege. The theme of misogyny runs rampant throughout the text whether it is undefendable by the absence of women in the text, the abuses women suffer at the hands of men, or the subtle ways in which society dictates and reinforces these negative statuses and images of women. Throughout the text women are virtually invisible and live their lives on the sidelines it is clear from a close read... ...p exclusively be sickened and saddened by not only the reality of women in Africa but of Achebes portrayal of it. Works Cited Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart. London William Heinemann Ltd., 1958. Chun, June. The Role o f Women in Things Fall Apart 1990 October 1999 Jeyifo, Biodun. Okonkwo and his Mother Things Fall Apart and Issues of Gender in the Constitution of African Postcolonial intervention Callaloo Fall 1993 Mezu, Rose Ure. Women in Achebes World Spring/Summer 1995. October 1999 Osei-Nyame, Kwadwo. Chinua Achebe Writing Culture Representations of Gender and Tyranny in Things Fall Apart Research in African Literatures Summer 1999. Sengovaa, Joko. Native Identity and Alienation in Richard Wrights Native Son and Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart A Cross Cultural Analysis The multiple sclerosis Quarterly Spring 1997.

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