Discerning and eloquent critics have given us a vocabulary to describe the rhetorical achievement of Things Fall Apart. Distinguishing Achebe from other early anglophone African writers, critics locate his genius in his exploitation of the novel as a form for historicizing the Igbo past and writing ‘Africa’ into ‘world history’. Abiola Irele observes, for example, that Things Fall Apart provides ‘an image of an African society reconstituted as a living entity and in its historic circumstances, an image of a coherent social structure forming the institutional fabric of a universe of meaning and values’ (2001: 115). Simon Gikandi similarly underscores the novel's success in illustrating ‘a fundamental linkage between a mode of production, a s...
The Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe is known to be one of the most influential African writers and ho...
Some literary critics of Achebe's novels, among who are Joseph Swann (1990) and C. L. Innes (1990) ...
The nature and role of colonialism in the transformation, nay destruction of the African past, and t...
Discerning and eloquent critics have given us a vocabulary to describe the rhetorical achievement of...
Discerning and eloquent critics have given us a vocabulary to describe the rhetorical achievement of...
This paper attempts a deconstructive reading of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart. As the most popul...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
Chinua Achebe (1930- 2013) published his first novel Things Fall Apart (TFA) in 1958. Achebe wrote T...
Various factors lead Achebe to write Things Fall Apart, which has acquired the status of a classic; ...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Achebe’s novel, Things Fall Apart has attracted a glut of global opinions on the nature and characte...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
The Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe is known to be one of the most influential African writers and ho...
Some literary critics of Achebe's novels, among who are Joseph Swann (1990) and C. L. Innes (1990) ...
The nature and role of colonialism in the transformation, nay destruction of the African past, and t...
Discerning and eloquent critics have given us a vocabulary to describe the rhetorical achievement of...
Discerning and eloquent critics have given us a vocabulary to describe the rhetorical achievement of...
This paper attempts a deconstructive reading of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart. As the most popul...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
Chinua Achebe wrote his classic novel, Things Fall Apart in response to the stark negative portrayal...
Chinua Achebe (1930- 2013) published his first novel Things Fall Apart (TFA) in 1958. Achebe wrote T...
Various factors lead Achebe to write Things Fall Apart, which has acquired the status of a classic; ...
Abstract: Much, very much has been written about Chinua Achebe's premier novel, Things fall Apart (1...
Achebe’s novel, Things Fall Apart has attracted a glut of global opinions on the nature and characte...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
Literature, as an impersonation of human activity, often portrays a picture of what people think, sa...
The Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe is known to be one of the most influential African writers and ho...
Some literary critics of Achebe's novels, among who are Joseph Swann (1990) and C. L. Innes (1990) ...
The nature and role of colonialism in the transformation, nay destruction of the African past, and t...