Things Fall Apart Gender Analysis

996 Words4 Pages

There are constant struggles between gender, identity and class. Among the men and women in many African tribes that still exist today, there are differences, which will always remain intact because of the culture and the way in which they are taught to treat each other. Chinua Achebe wrote the novel, Things Fall Apart, which is a great piece of African literature that deals with the Igbo culture, history, and the taking over of African lands by British colonization. The ongoing gender conflict is a prominent theme in Things Fall Apart presenting the clash between men and women of the African Igbo society. Throughout history, from the beginning of time to today, women have frequently been viewed as inferior; men’s possessions whose sole purpose was to satisfy the men’s needs. Maybe it 's because men are physically stronger than women and have always had the ability to control them that way. The recurring theme of gender conflicts helps drive the novel Things Fall Apart by showing how important women are to the men. Chinua Achebe portrays this recurring theme through an analysis of women as a social groups’ spiritual, …show more content…

The education process is done in part through the ritual of storytelling. The narrator describes, “Low voices, broken now and again by singing, reached Okonkwo from his wives’ huts as each woman and her children told folk stories” (96). It is through storytelling that the children learn important lessons about the human condition, are taught the Ibo creation myths, such as the birds and the tortoise story, and master the art of communicating by retelling the stories themselves. As stated earlier in the novel, “Among Ibo the art of conversation is regarded very highly, and proverbs are the palm-oil with which words are eaten” (7). The Ibo women are playing a significant role in the facilitation of this learning, which is vital to their children’s ability to function within the Ibo