Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Masculinity vs. Femininity in Chinua Achebes Things Fall Apart Essay
Masculinity vs. Femininity in Things Fall Apartà          If viewed on the surface the story line of Things Fall Apart is a tragedy,  but when viewed in a wider perspective it is a story of deeper conflict. The  main issue is that the British have come to establish a mission and receive  converts. Less evident is the conflict this intrusion inserts between the Ibo  and British. The underlying issue is masculinity versus femininity. By this I  mean to say that the Ibo are an agrarian people who are a patriarchal and see  any sign of weakness as being less than desirable. The protagonist in the story,  Okonkwo, is the champion of this thought. As what would happen to him seems to  happen to the Ibo. When Okonkwo disagrees he is usually correct and the tribe  would suffer the same fate and vice versa.      In the novel the Chi is a powerful spirit that determines a man's lot in  life. One such instance is when Okonkwo was disbanded from his home for a  Feminine murder; Clearly his personal god or Chi was not made for great things.  A man could not rise above the destiny of his Chi.      The saying of his elders was not true---that a man who said yea his Chi also  affirmed. Here was a man whose Chi said nay despite his own affirmations. (p.  131) The Chi then is the most important aspect of Ibo society. The most  compelling argument for conflict between the British colonists and the Ibo lies  directly within the tribes Chi.      Chi, as stated, is the will of a man. The Ibo are guided by this and believe  that they can only rise to the level to which their personal God will allow.  (p.131) This being the case the Ibo themselves are destined to rise only as far  as their cumulative Chi will allow. If the Chi of the British is strong, eve...              ...ung lazy and reliant on the whites. When  Okonkwo's own son joins the church he must have felt a great sadness that his  son was weak in mind, and would become softened by the white culture. Feminine  versus masculine traits is the controversy in this instance. Okonkwo has built  his whole life on the masculinity of the tribe. The masculinity is what helps  the tribe survive.      Chi as discussed in this novel is the concept most important to understanding  the conflict within. Okonkwo's Chi is strong, and immersed the Umuofia in a  battle with the British. Further underlying conflict resides in the lack of  written law in African society, which led the British to assume they were not  civilized, and in a constant state of anarchy. These characteristics coupled  with an effeminate church led to the tragic end to Okonkwo's life, and  eventually the Umuofia culture.                         
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