"Does the Caucasian bring a crazy religious belief?" (153), claiming that Okunuk collapsed in the case of Chinua Acebebe. In the novel, the hero Okonkwo and his son Nwoye experienced a sudden change in their village from the arrival of white people. They started living in the village Umoufia of my hometown. After accidental killing of Okonkwo, he was banished to Mbanta for seven years. During his years of exile, Okonkwo heard the white missionaries who appeared in Umuofia, and they came to Mbanta.
Okonkwo 's story at Chonua Achebe broke up in tragic hero, Chinua Achebe' s novel Things Fall Apart. Aristotle's "poet" defines a tragic hero as a high-ranking good person, shows a tragic defect ("hypersomorphism") and undergoes a dramatic inversion ("percutaneous disease"). Strong recognition moment ("anagnorisis") Okonkwo is a leader and a diligent member of the Umuofia Igbo community and his tragic fault is his extreme fear of weakness and failure. - ... Another book with many good examples of social class and power relations is A Doll's House. This book is written about a wealthy person, Tobard, who is responsible for the bank. For his profession, he is a very powerful man, and many rich friends, he clearly has a high social status. This was proved when Nora ruined him. Because he borrowed money to save him, he got angry. He is very angry and will destroy him socially and make him a very low state in society.
The relationship of sex in the circumstances of Chinua Achebe is separated from Chinua Achebe 's novel "Material Degeneration". There, the Ibo patriarchal society has a strict behavioral practice system based on sex. These practices severely limit the women's liberty of warts and help to boost the idea that warts of men are better than generations over tribal women. Among the people of this society, weak situations are closely related to the state of women. - Chinua Achebe 's thing falls apart Chinua Achebe' s last "chaotic thing" chapter "After choosing, I chose the title of the book, lowering the original tribe of Niger". Title of the book chosen to focus on people in Africa, especially Ibo