Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 127) - Clayton G. Mackenzie (essay date Summer 1996)


Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 127) - Clayton G. Mackenzie (essay date Summer 1996)

Clayton G. Mackenzie (essay date Summer 1996)

SOURCE: "The Metamorphosis of Piety in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart," in Research in African Literatures, Vol. 27, No. 2, Summer, 1996, pp. 128-38.

[In the following essay, Mackenzie details the transformation of indigenous religious beliefs and practices in Things Fall Apart, comparing it to the relatively static portrayal of religion in Arrow of God.]

Matters of religion are thematically central to Things Fall Apart and Arrow of God. Both novels reflect revisions in the nature of traditional worship, and both attest to the demise of traditional mores in the face of an aggressive and alien proselytizing religion. The disparities between the two novels are equally significant. Possibly for reasons of historical setting, Things Fall Apart differs from Arrow of God in its presentation of the status of indigenous beliefs and in its precise...

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