Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 127) - Solomon O. Iyasere (essay date March 1992)
Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 127) - Solomon O. Iyasere (essay date March 1992)
Solomon O. Iyasere (essay date March 1992)
SOURCE: "Okonkwo's Participation in the Killing of His 'Son' in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart: A Study of Ignoble Decisiveness," in CLA Journal, Vol. XXXV, No. 3, March, 1992, pp. 303-15.
[In the following essay, Iyasere explains the thematic and structural significance of the murder of Ikemefuna in Things Fall Apart, focusing on the character development of Okonkwo.]
No episode in Achebe's memorable novel, Things Fall Apart,1 is more shocking and heartrending as the execution of Ikemefuna, an event too dreadful to endure. Circumstances surrounding the event make it even more hideous—if that is possible—and invite our moral revulsion more intensely than the killing of the messenger. Commenting on the significance of the murder of Ikemefuna, David Caroll writes:
The death of Ikemefuna is a turning point in the novel. The guardianship of...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Chinua Achebe with Charles H. Rowell (interview date 28 May 1989)
- Solomon O. Iyasere (essay date March 1992)
- Adeleke Adeeko (essay date April 1992)
- Chris Kwame Awuyah (essay date October 1992)
- Chelva Kanaganayakam (essay date October 1993)
- Simon Gikandi (essay date 1993)
- Chinua Achebe with Eleanor Wachtel (interview date January 1994)
- Andrew E. Robson (essay date June 1994)
- Anthonia C. Kalu (essay date 1994)
- Neil ten Kortenaar (essay date January 1995)
- Stephen Criswell (essay date 1995)
- Clayton G. Mackenzie (essay date Summer 1996)
- Richard Begam (essay date Fall 1997)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
