In traditional warts culture, women can not be treated equal to their wealth. In the family, the child always belongs to the father, not the mother. "I heard that in some tribes men's children belong to my wife and family" (74). Okonkou was shocked by this embarrassing behavior. It is common and desirable for a husband to have more than one wife. For the week of peace, the goddess banned his wife from assaulting, as when Okonkwo beat Ojiugo.
Oral English speech invaded the cultural advantages of Ibo society before the colon. Chinua Achebe's novel "The Fall of Things" explains the social and cultural characteristics of culture based on labor and masculinity, consistency and intimacy, and ultimately a solid judicial system. The value of a man is measured by its strength, the amount of work you can accomplish, and the way you effectively feed your family. I compiled the story of my life. The main character, Okonkwo, comes from an external narrator. Through the story, there are different spatial environments including Iguedo and Muventa, the background of the era is the turn of the 19th century. At the beginning of the story, Okonkwo is one of the most respected people in their tribe, and is eager to join the tribal lords and moves constantly in social ladders.
In 1958, Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe wrote "Fall Fall Apart". He wrote an imaginary explanation of the people of Ibo named Okonkwo and the lives of Umofia in the village and surrounding areas. However, the explanation of Achebe 's Ibo culture is very realistic and contests the beliefs of European Africans and their culture. When the European powers entered Africa, they believed that Africans were born with violence and barbarians, but the fall of the apartment expressed a very different view of warts.
Prior to the white people, the things of Chinua Cavee Fall Apart painted Africa, especially Ivo society. "Collapse" analyzes the destruction of African culture in the destruction of the relationship between individuals and society. Achebe tells us a lot about Ibo society, translates the myths and proverbs of Ibo, and also explains the role of women in Africa before colonization. In "Fall of things", the reader is pursuing the trials and sufferings of the Okonkow. (16) For Okonkou, his father Unocha reflects the mistakes of failure and weakness. Okonkwo was mocked by other children when they were children, when they called Unoka agbala. Agbara may mean a man or "female" who has not won.