Thursday, October 27, 2016

The role of women in "Things Fall Apart"

   Women in Things Fall Apart and in Igbo/Ibo culture are definitely not the dominant sex. Most people seem to see their role as subservient, and tend to get a little angry about it. While women in this culture are not seen as important as men (at least so far in the novel), this is not necessarily the case.

   Some of the jobs that women were assigned are growing crops, although these are considered "women's crops"; "they grew women's crops, like coco-yams, beans and cassava" (22-23). They are called this because yams are considered to be the "kings of crops", and thus a man's crop. While the yam may be important among Igbo/Ibo culture, crops like cassava are a "major staple food in the developing world, providing a basic diet for over half a billion people". Without these "women's crops", the clan would soon die out. In the novel, the person chosen to represent their one of their most important godesses, the oracle Agbala, is a woman named Chielo. One interesting thing to point out is that the definition of agbala is woman or a man without title. It seems curious to me that they decided to name one of their most important deities this.

   Although women in this culture may be mistreated, they are also honored, which we must not forget when complaining about another people's culture. Women in the novel must not be so mistreated or undervalued as some may think if they are the one's chosen to grow their main food supply as well as representing their gods.

"Cassava." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 27 Oct. 2016.

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

On the subject of Chi


From what I understand, chi in Igbo/Ibo culture is something similar to a guardian angel. Chi is a person's "personal god", whom you depend on for good health and fortune, as well as determining your destiny. Your chi is seen as a fragment of the "universal" chi, the god Chineke. At one point during Things Fall Apart, we learn that each person has a shrine to his or her chi in their own hut, showing that a person's chi is very important among society, maybe almost as important as the greater dieties. Also, on page 27 of the novel, it is said that "when a man says yes his chi says yes also". This further reinforces how a deeply intertwined a person's chi is with his or herself. All in all, chi seems to be very important among Igbo/Ibo culture, determining how one is viewed by the others in society.