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This section contains 869 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
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Things Fall Apart Critical Essay #3
In the following excerpt, Sarr explores Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart from a cultural perspective.
Written about the past of Africa by a novelist who sees himself as a "teacher," Things Fall Apart encompasses several worlds, several experiences, sometimes complex, all altered or mixed. Achebe is never a mere reporter of public events. Talking of Things Fall Apart, he said: "I now know that my first book was an act of atonement with my past, the ritual return and homage of a prodigal son" [Achebe in Morning Yet on Creation Day, Heinemann, 1975]. The past that Chinua Achebe describes so beautifully in Things Fall Apart is a past that Achebe himself had to rediscover. It is a past that was largely lost as a result of twentieth-century Europeanization. This rediscovery of the suppressed past IS an act of faith and religious revival. Achebe, like the majority of African...
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This section contains 869 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
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