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Literature Poetry Lit Terms Shakescleare. Download this LitChart! Okonkwo is a self-made, well-respected member of the Umuofia clan. As an uncompromising man's man, Okonkwo's relationship towards his family is one of complete dictatorship.
His three wives are there to serve him his food and raise his children. Achebe describes him as "tall and huge" with "bushy eyebrows and [a] wide nose [that gives] him a very severe look. Okonkwo is the sole and unquestionable authority figure in his household. Okonkwo is a self-made man. He achieves greatness through his own hard work and determination. Okonkwo started his life without the benefits that other young men had. During the Week of Peace, Okonkwo commits the crime of beating his wife.
This is his first crime against the earth. As punishment, he is told to make a ritual sacrifice, which he does. Who is Ezeudu in things fall apart? Category: family and relationships divorce. What chapter is Ezinma sick? Summary: Chapter 9. How old is Okonkwo?
How does Okonkwo die? Who is Okonkwo father? Perhaps down in his heart Okonkwo was not a cruel man. But his whole life was dominated by fear, the fear of failure and of weakness. Instead, Okonkwo suffers from the existential fear that he will not succeed in life and thus end up like his unremarkable father. Okonkwo remarks to himself multiple times that he wishes she had been born a boy, since he considers her to have such a masculine spirit. Neither father nor son is unable to see and understand the other on his own terms.
Okonkwo shamefully beats his youngest wife for her negligence in not preparing dinner. The priest demands that Okonkwo will pay a fine for breaking the peace during the sacred time known as the Week of Peace. As soon as his father walked in, that night, Nwoye knew that Ikemefuna had been killed, and something seemed to give way inside him, like the snapping of a tightened bow. Skip to content Who is Ezeudu in things fall apart?
Key Questions and Answers Ogbuefi Ezeudu, a village elder, warns Okonkwo that he should not kill Ikemefuna because Ikemefuna regards Okonkwo as his father and to kill him would be a sin. Does Okonkwo regret killing Ikemefuna? What was Okonkwo punishment for beating his wife? Which son did Okonkwo kill? Early in the chapter, Achebe foreshadows the event with Okonkwo's memory of Ezeudu's warning about not killing Ikemefuna. The author builds dramatic tension by describing an increasingly frenzied scene of dancing, leaping, shouting, drumming, and the firing of guns, as well as the frightening appearance of the egwugwu.
The action climaxes with an explosion of gunfire and then comes to a stop with the phrase "All was silent. As in Chapter 8, Obierika quietly questions clan traditions — this time, the tradition demanding that Okonkwo be banished for seven years because of an accidental killing. He also questions the tribal abandonment of twins, remembering his own innocent children left to die in the forest. The chapter includes several intimations of impending doom for the clan and its traditions.
Achebe ends the chapter dramatically with the proverb, "If one finger brought oil, it soiled the others," suggesting that Okonkwo's crime may lead to the ultimate downfall of Umuofia itself. Di-go-go-di-go the sound of drumbeats on the ekwe , or drums.
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