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The Influence Of Colonialism In Nwoga's Things Fall Apart

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The above assertion maybe seen as being Eurocentric in orientation, on the contrary, Nwoga (1978) gave an opinion which may be seen to have been given from an African perspective when he argued that, "(...) he sees both European and Arab colonialism as destructive of the black man's sense of personal worth and dignity" (p.54). Nonetheless, Nwoga (1978) drew attention to a very important component of the impact of the British colonial system on the socio-political system of the Igbo people regarding to how British colonial system eliminated certain discriminative aspects of the Igbo society. Nwoga (1978) while using ‘Things Fall Apart’ to explain the influence of colonialism in Igbo land stated that
"(...) some of the influence of Western colonialism was disintegrative, others represented, for some people at any rate, a recovery of lost sense of humanity and security. For the caste slave, the war hostage, the twin and all others who constituted the wretched of the earth and the niggertrash of the Igbo traditional society (...)" (p.59).
Similarly, Nwabueze (1984) also stated that “only those who needed protection responded positively to the call of the missionaries, and …show more content…

p.12). According to Ola (2015) one of the main effect of colonial rule in Nigeria remains the “distortions of natural boundaries without due recourse to antecedent institutions and cultures. The western civilization submerged and dismantled indigenous institutions and, in its place, a foreign rule was established" (p.71) Ola (2015) went further to assert that after dismantling the ‘indigenous institutions’ came the initiation of Western democracy disregarding how these natives were living their lives prior their arrival of the

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