American Research Journal of English and Literature        cover
Open Access

American Research Journal of English and Literature

ISSN (Online): 2378-9026

DOI: 10.46568/arjel

Research Article Vol. 7, Issue 1 2020 Open Access

Chinua Achebe’s Objective Stance in Depicting Socio-Cultural Issues of the Igbo in the Novel Things Fall Apart

Md. Mahbubul Alam

Lecturer in English, Pabna Cadet College, Pabna, Bangladesh.
Md. Mahbubul Alam, “Chinua Achebe’s Objective Stance in Depicting Socio-Cultural Issues of the Igbo in the Novel Things Fall Apart”, American Research Journal of English and Literature, Vol 7, no. 1, 2021, pp. 1-9.
Abstract
In Chinua Achebe’s magnum opus Things Fall Apart we see an authentic and objective presentation of the Igbo society. The ethnographic depiction of the Igbo life in the novel indicates that Achebe has tried to maintain his objective standpoint in dealing with various socio-cultural issues of the Igbo society. He has depicted these issues from the perspective of both an unbiased observer as well as an unprejudiced critic. The present study has shown to what extent and in which aspects has Achebe maintained his objective stance in depicting the pre-colonial Ibo society in respect of various socio-cultural mechanisms in the novel. To do so, firstly, this paper has presented the socio-cultural aspects like social administration, justice, respect for the elders, social status, rituals, communal harmony and unity etc. of the Igbo people in their real life already put forward by various researchers and anthropologists without considering the presence of their related contents in Things Fall Apart. Then, these real issues and their parallel presence in the novel have been presented side by side to see to what extent the scholars’ claims about various socio-cultural sides of the Igbo life are either agreed or refuted in the novel. Finally, these issues are thoroughly dealt with to discuss Achebe’s objectivity. The results show that the scholars’ claim about the socio-cultural realities of the Igbo possesses close proximity with those of the novel. The core idea of the findings is that Achebe maintains objectivity in presenting various socio-cultural sides of the pre-colonial Igbo society in Things Fall Apart without spoiling any literary grandeur of the novel.