Chinua Achebe's first three novels are sometimes
called "The African Trilogy." They are Things Fall Apart (1958), No
Longer At Ease (1960) and Arrow of God (1964). I
read Things Fall Apart(probably the most widely read African novel)
some time ago, I have not read No Longer At Ease. Most of Achebe's
writing (and he has published a great deal of work) deals with the impact of
the British colonization of the Igbo lands of northern Nigeria on traditional
culture there and particularly with the loss of authority of African priests
under pressure both political and religious.
BothThings Fall Apart and Arrow
of God present tragic protagonists who embody this authority, and in
both books the human weaknesses and character failings of these men are
presented as important elements contributing to societal collapse. This
discussion of African weaknesses in confronting colonization, always in
microcosm, is key to Achebe's success in illuminating the catastrophic 20th
century history of the region: it is intellectually fruitful, provocative, and
gives Achebe moral authority both in Nigeria and in the outside world (I was
surprised to discover that Achebe, 81 this year, continues working as a member
of the faculty at Brown University).
Arrow of God is denser with detail than Things Fall
Apart, with a good deal more technical discussion of the rituals and concepts
underlying Igbo religious customs and with a larger and more fleshed-out cast
of characters. Ezeulu, priest of Ulu, the titular deity of a small and remote
group of villages, nobly resists cooptation by the heavy-handed and not
particularly competent British authorities. He is secure in his own identity
and standing, a believer in his own authority and function. This gives him the instincts
needed to resist usurpation but also clouds his ability to recognize that his
tradition is under genuine threat. He commits two errors, first by sending one
of his sons, Oduche, to become a Christian (Ezeulu sees this move as
essentially strategic) and second by refusing to perform the ceremony needed to
authorize the yam harvest while he is detained by the British, two overreaches
that have disastrous consequences.
Achebe, who never patronizes his own culture, shows
how rival priests (each with their own deity) function as political agents
(what appear to be religious contests of magic have roots in disputes over
farmland), and have shallower roots than their rhetoric implies (the religious
disposition of Ulu goes back, not to the beginning of time, but to organizing
against African slavers decades before). A cultural system, like an ecosystem,
is deceptively fragile. Thus Achebe wields a double-edged sword: Britain is
called to account for its immensely destructive imperial policies, but Africans
are confronted with their own guilt for failing to criticize themselves and
adapt to modern challenges.
Two contemporary Nigerian novels that each, in
different ways, continue Achebe's examination of cultural erosion and that have
been the subjects of posts here are Ben Okri's The Famished Road(1991) and Chimamanda Ngozi
Adichie's Purple Hibiscus (2003).
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