SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 29
Things Fall Apart by Chinua
Achebe
Dr. T. Tsehloane
Chinua Achebe
• Born in 1930, in a village called Ogidi in South Eastern Nigeria.
• Went to University College, Ibadan for undergraduate studies.
• Worked for Nigerian broadcasting service (NBS)
• In 1966 his work was interrupted by the Nigerian civil war, when
South Eastern region attempted to breakaway to form the
independent state of Biafra.
C. Achebe
• After the war, he was appointed as a Senior Research Fellow at
University of Nigeria, Nsukka.
• Later on he was appointed in several universities abroad.
• He has received numerous awards and honours throughout the
world.
• He is a recipient of the Nigerian National Merit Award
• In 2007 he won Booker International Prize for Fiction
• He has written over twenty books: novels, short stories essays and
collections of poetry.
• He died on 21 March 2013 aged 82.
Famous Works
• Things Fall Apart (1958)
• No Longer at Ease (1960)
• Arrow of God (1964)
• A Man of the People (1966)
• Girls at War (1972)
• Anthills of the Savannah (1987)
Chinua Achebe
• Author’s first and most influential novel.
• Published 1958.
• It has sold over ten million copies.
• Has been translated into more than fifty languages.
• Breakdown of traditional African culture in face of European
colonisation in the late nineteenth century.
• It reflects on this important historical encounter from the point of
view of the Africans, the subjects of colonisation.
Challenging the Canon
• Achebe published Things Fall Apart as a response partly to what he
considered to be distortions and fabrications by Eurocentric novels, such as
Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and Joyce Cary’s Mister Johnson that
treat Africa as a primordial and cultureless foil to Europe.
• As a text, Things Fall Apart is set in the 1890’s and portrays a precolonial
African society and its subsequent encounter with British colonialism. It
shatters the stereotypical notions about Africa and Africans.
• Achebe depicts a traditional African society as complex with advanced
social institutions and traditions prior to its contact with Europeans.
• He conveys a fuller understanding of African culture and thus giving voice
to an underrepresented and previously denigrated colonial subject.
Edward Said’s Orientalism
• Illustrates the manner in which the representations of Europe’s
Others has been institutionalised since the eighteenth century as a
feature of its cultural dominance.
• Europe associated itself with order, rationality and symmetry.
• Non-Europeans were seen as inferior and associated with disorder,
irrationality and primitivism.
• Myth, opinion, hearsay and prejudice assumed the status of received
truth.
Achebe as a writer
• Believed in the power of literature to create and initiate social
change.
• Influenced other African writers to write stories from the point of
view of their own people.
•
• Pioneer and advocate of the need for the Africans to tell their own
stories from their own perspective.
Achebe’s mission as a writer
• “I believe in the complexity of the human story, and that there's no
way you can tell that story in one way and say, 'this is it.' Always there
will be someone who can tell it differently depending on where they
are standing ... this is the way I think the world's stories should be
told: from many different perspectives”.
Epigraph
• Turning and turning in the widening gyre
• The falcon cannot hear the falconer
• Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
• Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.
• WB Yeats
Epigraph
• The epigraph hints at chaos that arose when an established social and
political system collapses.
• It is a reference to the collapse of the traditional African tribal system in
the wake colonial invasion.
• Challenges the conventional notion of European colonialism as an
imposition of order.
• Colonialism disrupted African history and brought chaos.
• It can also be an ironic reference to the imminent disintegration of the
British colonial empire.
• The book was published just two years before Nigeria attained its
independence in 1960.
Things Fall Apart
• Counter-Text to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
• Nature and Development of the main character
• Setting of the novel
Achebe on Eurocentric Depiction of Africa
and Africans
• “The last four or five hundred years of European contact with Africa
produced a body of literature that presented Africa in a very bad light
and Africans in very lurid terms. The reason for this had to do with
the need to justify the slave trade and slavery…This continued until
the Africans themselves, in the middle of the twentieth century, took
into their own hands the telling of their story”
Achebe on Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
• “Heart of Darkness projects the image of Africa as the other world the
antithesis of Europe and therefore of civilisation, a place where man’s
vaunted intelligence and refinement are finally mocked by
triumphant bestiality”.
• “The point of my observations should be quite clear by now, namely
that Joseph Conrad was a thoroughgoing racist. That this simple truth
is glossed over in criticisms of his work is due to the fact that white
racism against Africa is such a normal way of thinking that its
manifestations go completely unremarked”.
Achebe on Conrad
• “Africa as a setting and backdrop which eliminates the African as
human factor. Africa as a metaphysical battlefield devoid of all
recognizable humanity, into which the wandering European enters at
his peril…The real question is the dehumanization of Africa and
Africans which this age-long attitude has fostered and continues to
foster in the world”.
Achebe on Conrad
• “Conrad saw and condemned the evil of imperial exploitation but was
strangely unaware of the racism on which it sharpened its iron tooth”.
• “But the victims of racist slander who for centuries have had to live
with the inhumanity it makes them heir to have always known better
than any casual visitor even when he comes loaded with the gifts of a
Conrad.”
• (Chinua Achebe, “An Image of Africa”)
Timeline of the Debate
• 1899 Heart of Darkness
• 1958 Things Fall Apart
• 1975 “Image of Africa”
Achebe on Conrad
• Achebe’s criticism of Conrad focuses on three main points
1. Through his narrator Marlow, Conrad portrays Africa as a blank
space
• He does so not because the land was uninhabited, but because such inhabitation was of no
consequence to Europe
2. The Africans in the novel are depicted as virtually without
language
3. Achebe argues that the predominant modernist readings of the
text render Africans absent
• In such interpretations Africans serve as substitutes for a European indisposition
Achebe on Conrad
• For Achebe Africa and Africans in the novella are “mere metaphors
for the break-up of one petty European mind”
• Africa’s darkness stands for the animality lurking in the civilised
European heart
• Africa’s darkness therefore comes to symbolise Europe’s fears of
evolutionary reversion
• Forever tied to this symbolism, Africans no longer exist as
(independent) human beings
• They are reduced to representatives of a long past era in evolutionary
history possessing primordial human traits
Achebe on Conrad
• Does Achebe sufficiently take into account the historical context in
which the novella was written?
• Does he analyse the contradictions in the novella?
• Does he differentiate between narrator/author? Is this a necessary
distinction?
• What did Achebe want to achieve by criticising Conrad in this
deliberately provocative manner?
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides
2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides

More Related Content

What's hot

En gl 308 intro & achebe
En gl 308 intro & achebeEn gl 308 intro & achebe
En gl 308 intro & achebeemmyrobertson
 
Things fall apart as a historical fiction
Things fall apart as a historical fictionThings fall apart as a historical fiction
Things fall apart as a historical fictionDHRUVICHAVDA14
 
“Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”
 “Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction” “Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”
“Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”kishan8282
 
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014Presentation on african literature heeral 2014
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014heeralbhatt
 
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'Culture shown in 'things fall apart'
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'Bhumi Dangi
 
The Term of " Diaspora ".
The Term of " Diaspora ".The Term of " Diaspora ".
The Term of " Diaspora ".Ankita Gohel
 
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apart
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apartThe character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apart
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apartLubabalo Mji
 
Things Fall Apart Intro
Things Fall Apart IntroThings Fall Apart Intro
Things Fall Apart IntroKieran Ryan
 
A House for Mr Biswas
A House for Mr BiswasA House for Mr Biswas
A House for Mr BiswasSyed Naqvi
 
African American Literature
African American LiteratureAfrican American Literature
African American Literaturecbrownell
 
africa america literature
africa america literatureafrica america literature
africa america literatureraynaldogisiri
 
Post colexample
Post colexamplePost colexample
Post colexamplejakajmmk
 
A house for Mr. biswas
A house for Mr. biswasA house for Mr. biswas
A house for Mr. biswasAich Zee
 
Contemporary African Writers with their write-ups
Contemporary African Writers with their write-upsContemporary African Writers with their write-ups
Contemporary African Writers with their write-upsMontefolka Ruel
 
African- American Writers
African- American WritersAfrican- American Writers
African- American WritersUrvi Dave
 
Disgrace presentation
Disgrace presentationDisgrace presentation
Disgrace presentationNick D'Silva
 
Petals of Blood
Petals of BloodPetals of Blood
Petals of Bloodrakhiraj42
 
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writer
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writerV.s naipaul as a Travelogue writer
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writerHema Goswami
 

What's hot (19)

En gl 308 intro & achebe
En gl 308 intro & achebeEn gl 308 intro & achebe
En gl 308 intro & achebe
 
Things fall apart as a historical fiction
Things fall apart as a historical fictionThings fall apart as a historical fiction
Things fall apart as a historical fiction
 
“Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”
 “Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction” “Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”
“Things Fall Apart as a Historical Fiction”
 
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014Presentation on african literature heeral 2014
Presentation on african literature heeral 2014
 
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'Culture shown in 'things fall apart'
Culture shown in 'things fall apart'
 
The Term of " Diaspora ".
The Term of " Diaspora ".The Term of " Diaspora ".
The Term of " Diaspora ".
 
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apart
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apartThe character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apart
The character of okonkwo in the novel things fall apart
 
Things Fall Apart Intro
Things Fall Apart IntroThings Fall Apart Intro
Things Fall Apart Intro
 
A House for Mr Biswas
A House for Mr BiswasA House for Mr Biswas
A House for Mr Biswas
 
African American Literature
African American LiteratureAfrican American Literature
African American Literature
 
africa america literature
africa america literatureafrica america literature
africa america literature
 
Post colexample
Post colexamplePost colexample
Post colexample
 
A house for Mr. biswas
A house for Mr. biswasA house for Mr. biswas
A house for Mr. biswas
 
Contemporary African Writers with their write-ups
Contemporary African Writers with their write-upsContemporary African Writers with their write-ups
Contemporary African Writers with their write-ups
 
African- American Writers
African- American WritersAfrican- American Writers
African- American Writers
 
Disgrace presentation
Disgrace presentationDisgrace presentation
Disgrace presentation
 
Sneh
SnehSneh
Sneh
 
Petals of Blood
Petals of BloodPetals of Blood
Petals of Blood
 
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writer
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writerV.s naipaul as a Travelogue writer
V.s naipaul as a Travelogue writer
 

Similar to 2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides

Things fall apart slides
Things fall apart slidesThings fall apart slides
Things fall apart slidesmxolisi ngwenya
 
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​ Rasicm in Conrad's​ ​ Heart of...
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​  Rasicm in Conrad's​  ​ Heart of...20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​  Rasicm in Conrad's​  ​ Heart of...
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​ Rasicm in Conrad's​ ​ Heart of...DAREENHADDAD1
 
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptx
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptxEng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptx
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptxLourenzeNama
 
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...Amit Makvana
 
African novels and novelists
African novels and novelistsAfrican novels and novelists
African novels and novelistsEkeminiIsaac
 
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdf
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdfAFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdf
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdfShielynMayZamoraAgui
 
African poetry in english
African poetry in english African poetry in english
African poetry in english Mahima Zaman
 
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01ManjunathRajaput
 
Things fall apart
Things fall apartThings fall apart
Things fall apartconniehalks
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
AAS200NegrititudeLecture
AAS200NegrititudeLectureAAS200NegrititudeLecture
AAS200NegrititudeLectureCasey Phanor
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authorsFatima Gul
 
Intro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall ApartIntro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall Apartkimromero
 
The Post-Colonial Literature
The Post-Colonial LiteratureThe Post-Colonial Literature
The Post-Colonial LiteratureVishvaGajjar
 

Similar to 2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides (20)

Things fall apart slides
Things fall apart slidesThings fall apart slides
Things fall apart slides
 
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​ Rasicm in Conrad's​ ​ Heart of...
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​  Rasicm in Conrad's​  ​ Heart of...20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​  Rasicm in Conrad's​  ​ Heart of...
20th century ​ ​ From An Image of Arfica:​ ​ Rasicm in Conrad's​ ​ Heart of...
 
Chinua achebe
Chinua achebe Chinua achebe
Chinua achebe
 
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptx
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptxEng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptx
Eng.302Lesson1-2023in afroasianlite.pptx
 
Heart of darkness lecture 1(1)
Heart of darkness   lecture 1(1)Heart of darkness   lecture 1(1)
Heart of darkness lecture 1(1)
 
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...
Paper no 14 The African Literature Topic : Comparative analysis between "thin...
 
African novels and novelists
African novels and novelistsAfrican novels and novelists
African novels and novelists
 
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdf
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdfAFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdf
AFRICAN-LITERATURE NOTES AND MANUSCRIPT.pdf
 
African poetry in english
African poetry in english African poetry in english
African poetry in english
 
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01
Afro asianlit-150317101341-conversion-gate01
 
African Lit
African LitAfrican Lit
African Lit
 
Things fall apart
Things fall apartThings fall apart
Things fall apart
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
AAS200NegrititudeLecture
AAS200NegrititudeLectureAAS200NegrititudeLecture
AAS200NegrititudeLecture
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
A study of j.m.coetzee
A study of j.m.coetzeeA study of j.m.coetzee
A study of j.m.coetzee
 
Aparthied authors
Aparthied authorsAparthied authors
Aparthied authors
 
Intro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall ApartIntro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall Apart
 
Intro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall ApartIntro To Things Fall Apart
Intro To Things Fall Apart
 
The Post-Colonial Literature
The Post-Colonial LiteratureThe Post-Colonial Literature
The Post-Colonial Literature
 

Recently uploaded

microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionMaksud Ahmed
 
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxOrganic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxVS Mahajan Coaching Centre
 
PSYCHIATRIC History collection FORMAT.pptx
PSYCHIATRIC   History collection FORMAT.pptxPSYCHIATRIC   History collection FORMAT.pptx
PSYCHIATRIC History collection FORMAT.pptxPoojaSen20
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionSafetyChain Software
 
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.Compdf
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.CompdfConcept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.Compdf
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.CompdfUmakantAnnand
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon AUnboundStockton
 
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptx
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptxHow to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptx
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptxmanuelaromero2013
 
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website App
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website AppURLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website App
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website AppCeline George
 
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxSOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxiammrhaywood
 
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting DataJhengPantaleon
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentInMediaRes1
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingTechSoup
 
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its CharacteristicsScience 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its CharacteristicsKarinaGenton
 
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and Actinides
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and ActinidesSeparation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and Actinides
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and ActinidesFatimaKhan178732
 
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of Powders
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of PowdersMicromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of Powders
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of PowdersChitralekhaTherkar
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityGeoBlogs
 
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxSolving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxOH TEIK BIN
 
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha elections
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha electionsPresiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha elections
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha electionsanshu789521
 
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991RKavithamani
 

Recently uploaded (20)

microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
 
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxOrganic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
 
PSYCHIATRIC History collection FORMAT.pptx
PSYCHIATRIC   History collection FORMAT.pptxPSYCHIATRIC   History collection FORMAT.pptx
PSYCHIATRIC History collection FORMAT.pptx
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
 
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.Compdf
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.CompdfConcept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.Compdf
Concept of Vouching. B.Com(Hons) /B.Compdf
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
 
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptx
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptxHow to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptx
How to Make a Pirate ship Primary Education.pptx
 
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website App
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website AppURLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website App
URLs and Routing in the Odoo 17 Website App
 
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxSOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
 
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data
_Math 4-Q4 Week 5.pptx Steps in Collecting Data
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
 
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSDStaff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
 
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its CharacteristicsScience 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
 
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and Actinides
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and ActinidesSeparation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and Actinides
Separation of Lanthanides/ Lanthanides and Actinides
 
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of Powders
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of PowdersMicromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of Powders
Micromeritics - Fundamental and Derived Properties of Powders
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
 
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxSolving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
 
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha elections
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha electionsPresiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha elections
Presiding Officer Training module 2024 lok sabha elections
 
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991
Industrial Policy - 1948, 1956, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1991
 

2020 things fall apart introductory lecture slides

  • 1. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Dr. T. Tsehloane
  • 2. Chinua Achebe • Born in 1930, in a village called Ogidi in South Eastern Nigeria. • Went to University College, Ibadan for undergraduate studies. • Worked for Nigerian broadcasting service (NBS) • In 1966 his work was interrupted by the Nigerian civil war, when South Eastern region attempted to breakaway to form the independent state of Biafra.
  • 3. C. Achebe • After the war, he was appointed as a Senior Research Fellow at University of Nigeria, Nsukka. • Later on he was appointed in several universities abroad. • He has received numerous awards and honours throughout the world. • He is a recipient of the Nigerian National Merit Award • In 2007 he won Booker International Prize for Fiction • He has written over twenty books: novels, short stories essays and collections of poetry. • He died on 21 March 2013 aged 82.
  • 4. Famous Works • Things Fall Apart (1958) • No Longer at Ease (1960) • Arrow of God (1964) • A Man of the People (1966) • Girls at War (1972) • Anthills of the Savannah (1987)
  • 5. Chinua Achebe • Author’s first and most influential novel. • Published 1958. • It has sold over ten million copies. • Has been translated into more than fifty languages. • Breakdown of traditional African culture in face of European colonisation in the late nineteenth century. • It reflects on this important historical encounter from the point of view of the Africans, the subjects of colonisation.
  • 6. Challenging the Canon • Achebe published Things Fall Apart as a response partly to what he considered to be distortions and fabrications by Eurocentric novels, such as Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and Joyce Cary’s Mister Johnson that treat Africa as a primordial and cultureless foil to Europe. • As a text, Things Fall Apart is set in the 1890’s and portrays a precolonial African society and its subsequent encounter with British colonialism. It shatters the stereotypical notions about Africa and Africans. • Achebe depicts a traditional African society as complex with advanced social institutions and traditions prior to its contact with Europeans. • He conveys a fuller understanding of African culture and thus giving voice to an underrepresented and previously denigrated colonial subject.
  • 7. Edward Said’s Orientalism • Illustrates the manner in which the representations of Europe’s Others has been institutionalised since the eighteenth century as a feature of its cultural dominance. • Europe associated itself with order, rationality and symmetry. • Non-Europeans were seen as inferior and associated with disorder, irrationality and primitivism. • Myth, opinion, hearsay and prejudice assumed the status of received truth.
  • 8. Achebe as a writer • Believed in the power of literature to create and initiate social change. • Influenced other African writers to write stories from the point of view of their own people. • • Pioneer and advocate of the need for the Africans to tell their own stories from their own perspective.
  • 9. Achebe’s mission as a writer • “I believe in the complexity of the human story, and that there's no way you can tell that story in one way and say, 'this is it.' Always there will be someone who can tell it differently depending on where they are standing ... this is the way I think the world's stories should be told: from many different perspectives”.
  • 10. Epigraph • Turning and turning in the widening gyre • The falcon cannot hear the falconer • Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; • Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world. • WB Yeats
  • 11. Epigraph • The epigraph hints at chaos that arose when an established social and political system collapses. • It is a reference to the collapse of the traditional African tribal system in the wake colonial invasion. • Challenges the conventional notion of European colonialism as an imposition of order. • Colonialism disrupted African history and brought chaos. • It can also be an ironic reference to the imminent disintegration of the British colonial empire. • The book was published just two years before Nigeria attained its independence in 1960.
  • 12. Things Fall Apart • Counter-Text to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness • Nature and Development of the main character • Setting of the novel
  • 13. Achebe on Eurocentric Depiction of Africa and Africans • “The last four or five hundred years of European contact with Africa produced a body of literature that presented Africa in a very bad light and Africans in very lurid terms. The reason for this had to do with the need to justify the slave trade and slavery…This continued until the Africans themselves, in the middle of the twentieth century, took into their own hands the telling of their story”
  • 14. Achebe on Conrad’s Heart of Darkness • “Heart of Darkness projects the image of Africa as the other world the antithesis of Europe and therefore of civilisation, a place where man’s vaunted intelligence and refinement are finally mocked by triumphant bestiality”. • “The point of my observations should be quite clear by now, namely that Joseph Conrad was a thoroughgoing racist. That this simple truth is glossed over in criticisms of his work is due to the fact that white racism against Africa is such a normal way of thinking that its manifestations go completely unremarked”.
  • 15. Achebe on Conrad • “Africa as a setting and backdrop which eliminates the African as human factor. Africa as a metaphysical battlefield devoid of all recognizable humanity, into which the wandering European enters at his peril…The real question is the dehumanization of Africa and Africans which this age-long attitude has fostered and continues to foster in the world”.
  • 16. Achebe on Conrad • “Conrad saw and condemned the evil of imperial exploitation but was strangely unaware of the racism on which it sharpened its iron tooth”. • “But the victims of racist slander who for centuries have had to live with the inhumanity it makes them heir to have always known better than any casual visitor even when he comes loaded with the gifts of a Conrad.” • (Chinua Achebe, “An Image of Africa”)
  • 17. Timeline of the Debate • 1899 Heart of Darkness • 1958 Things Fall Apart • 1975 “Image of Africa”
  • 18. Achebe on Conrad • Achebe’s criticism of Conrad focuses on three main points 1. Through his narrator Marlow, Conrad portrays Africa as a blank space • He does so not because the land was uninhabited, but because such inhabitation was of no consequence to Europe 2. The Africans in the novel are depicted as virtually without language 3. Achebe argues that the predominant modernist readings of the text render Africans absent • In such interpretations Africans serve as substitutes for a European indisposition
  • 19. Achebe on Conrad • For Achebe Africa and Africans in the novella are “mere metaphors for the break-up of one petty European mind” • Africa’s darkness stands for the animality lurking in the civilised European heart • Africa’s darkness therefore comes to symbolise Europe’s fears of evolutionary reversion • Forever tied to this symbolism, Africans no longer exist as (independent) human beings • They are reduced to representatives of a long past era in evolutionary history possessing primordial human traits
  • 20. Achebe on Conrad • Does Achebe sufficiently take into account the historical context in which the novella was written? • Does he analyse the contradictions in the novella? • Does he differentiate between narrator/author? Is this a necessary distinction? • What did Achebe want to achieve by criticising Conrad in this deliberately provocative manner?