Things Fall Apart Colonization Background Notes

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Historical Context: Things Fall Apart

EXPLORING Novels, 2003

Tribal Society

Things Fall Apart was published in 1958 just prior to Nigerian independence, but it depicts precolonial
Africa. Achebe felt it was important to portray Nigerians as they really were—not just provide a
shallow description of them as other authors had. The story takes place in the typical tribal village of
Umuofia, where the inhabitants (whom Achebe calls the Ibo, but who are also known as the Igbo)
practice rituals common to their native traditions.

The Ibo worshipped gods who protect, advise, and chastise them and who are represented by priests
and priestesses within the clan. For example, the Oracle of the Hills and the Caves grants knowledge
and wisdom to those who are brave enough to consult him. No one has ever seen the Oracle except
his priestess, who is an Ibo woman who has special powers of her own. Not only did the gods advise
the Ibo on community matters, but also they guided individuals. Each person had a personal god, or
chi, that directed his or her actions. A strong chi meant a strong person; people with weak chis were
pitied. Each man kept a separate hut, or shrine, where he stored the symbols of his personal god and
his ancestral spirits.

A hunting and gathering society, the Ibo existed on vegetables, with yams as the primary crop. Yams
were so important to them that the Ibo celebrated each new year with the Feast of the New Yam. This
festival thanked Ani, the earth goddess and source of all fertility. The Ibo prepared for days for the
festival, and the celebration itself lasted for two days. Yams also played a part in determining a man's
status in the tribe—the more yams a man has, the higher his status. Trade with other villages was
facilitated by small seashells called cowries which were used as a form of currency.

Within the village, people were grouped according to families, with the eldest man in the family having
the most power. On matters affecting the whole village, an assembly of adult men debated courses of
action, and men could influence these assemblies by purchasing "titles" from the tribal elders. This
system encouraged hard work and the spread of wealth. People who transgressed against the laws
and customs of the village had to confront the egwugwu, an assembly of tribesmen masked as spirits,
who would settle disputes and hand out punishment. Individual villages also attained various degrees
of political status. In the novel, other tribes respect and fear Umuofia. They believe that Umuofia's
magic is powerful and that the village's war-medicine, or agadi-nwayi, is particularly potent.
Neighboring clans always try to settle disputes peacefully with Umuofia to avoid having to war with
them.

Christianity and Colonization

While Christianity spread across North and South Africa as early as the late fifteenth century,
Christianity took its strongest hold when the majority of the missionaries arrived in the late 1800s. After
centuries of taking slaves out of Africa, Britain had outlawed the slave trade and now saw the
continent as ripe for colonization. Missionaries sent to convert the local population were often the first
settlers. They believed they could atone for the horrors of slavery by saving the souls of Africans.

At first, Africans were mistrustful of European Christians, and took advantage of the education the
missionaries provided without converting. Individuals who had no power under the current tribal order,
however, soon converted; in the novel, the missionaries who come to Umuofia convert only the
weaker tribesmen, or efulefu. Missionaries would convince these tribesmen that their tribe worshipped
false gods and that its false gods did not have the ability to punish them if they chose to join the
mission. When the mission and its converts accepted even the outcasts of the clan, the missionaries'
ranks grew. Eventually, some of the more important tribesmen would convert. As the mission
expanded, the clan divided, discontent simmered, and conflicts arose.

English Bureaucrats and Colonization

After the arrival of the British, when conflicts came up between villages the white government would
intervene instead of allowing villagers to settle them themselves. In the novel, a white District
Commissioner brings with him court messengers whose duty it is to bring in people who break the
white man's law. The messengers, called "Ashy-Buttocks" for the ash-colored shorts they wear, are
hated for their high-handed attitudes. These messengers and interpreters were often African Christian
converts who looked down on tribesmen who still followed traditional customs. If violence involved any
white missionaries or bureaucrats, British soldiers would often slaughter whole villages instead of
seeking and punishing guilty individuals. The British passed an ordinance in 1912 that legalized this
practice, and during an uprising in 1915, British troops killed more than forty natives in retaliation for
one dead and one wounded British soldier.

One of the most important results of Europe's colonization of Africa was the division of Africa into at
least fifty nation-states. Rather than being a part of a society determined by common language and
livelihood, Africans lived according to political boundaries. The divisions often split ethnic groups,
leading to tension and sometimes violence. The cohesiveness of the traditional society was gone.

Nigerian Independence

British colonial rule in Nigeria lasted only fifty-seven years, from 1903 to 1960. Although Nigerians had
long called for self-rule, it was not until the end of World War II that England began heeding these
calls. The Richards Constitution of 1946 was the first attempt to grant some native rule by bringing the
diverse peoples of Nigeria under one representative government. The three regions (northern,
southern and western) were brought under the administration of one legislative council composed of
twenty-eight Nigerians and seventeen British officers. Regional councils, however, guaranteed some
independence from the national council and forged a link between local authorities, such as tribal
chiefs, and the national government. There were three major tribes (the Hausa, the Yoruba and the
Igbo) and more than eight smaller ones living in Nigeria. This diversity complicated the creation of a
unified Nigeria. Between 1946 and 1960 the country went through several different constitutions, each
one attempting to balance power between the regional and the national bodies of government.

On October 1, 1960, Nigeria attained full status as a sovereign state and a member of the British
Commonwealth. But under the Constitution of 1960 the Queen of England was still the head of state.
She remained the commander- in-chief of Nigeria's armed forces, and the Nigerian navy operated as
part of Britain's Royal Navy. Nigerians felt frustrated by the implication that they were the subjects of a
monarch living over 4,000 miles away. In 1963, five years after the publication of Achebe's novel, a
new constitution would replace the British monarch with a Nigerian president as head of state in
Nigeria.

Literary Traditions

Achebe wrote Things Fall Apart just before Nigeria received its independence. He intended the book
for audiences outside Africa; he wanted to paint a true picture of precolonial Africa for those people
who had no direct knowledge of traditional African societies. As a result of the Nigerians' acquisition of
independence, the Nigerian educational system sought to encourage a national pride through the
study of Nigerian heritage. The educational system required Achebe's book in high schools throughout
the English-speaking countries in Africa. The book was well received. Chinua Achebe has been
recognized as "the most original African novelist writing in English," according to Charles Larson in
The Emergence of African Fiction. Critics throughout the world have praised Things Fall Apart as the
first African English-language classic.

Source Citation
"Historical Context: Things Fall Apart." EXPLORING Novels. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Stud
ent Resources in Context. Web. 4 Oct. 2016.

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