Abstract
Achebe’s Things Fall Apart is an influential novel in African literature for three reasons. First, it is a novel meant to promote African culture; second, it is a narrative about where things went wrong with Africans; and third, it is a prose text which contributed to Achebe’s worldwide recognition. It contains Achebe’s rejection of the degrading representation of Africans by European writers, and fosters Africa’s traditional values and humanism. The excesses of Igbo customs led the protagonist to flagrant misuse of power. The novel’s scriptural innovations bring fame to Achebe who is considered as the “Asiwaju” (Leader) of African literature, the “founding father of African fiction”, or again the “Eagle on Iroko”.
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CITATION STYLE
Casimir, K. (2020). Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart: A Seminal Novel in African Literature. Studies in Linguistics and Literature, 4(3), p55. https://doi.org/10.22158/sll.v4n3p55
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