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Things Fall Apart. Chapter One. Setting. Umuofia (Ibo for ‘people of the forest’) There are 9 villages in Umuofia . The neighbouring villlage is Mbaino . . Introduction to Okonkwo.
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Things Fall Apart Chapter One
Setting • Umuofia (Ibo for ‘people of the forest’) • There are 9 villages in Umuofia. • The neighbouringvilllage is Mbaino.
Introduction to Okonkwo • What is the effect Achebe wants achieve through the introduction of Okonkwo in the first two paragraphs of the novel?
Introduction to Okonkwo • What do we learn about Okonkwo through his physical description?
Introduction to Unoka • What do we learn about Unoka?
Ibo Traditions • What is the significance of the breaking of the kola nut? • What do we learn about how the Ibo measure success or failure? • What is the significance of the words “proverbs are the palm-oil with which words are eaten”.
Ibo Traditions • What is the significance of the words “proverbs are the palm-oil with which words are eaten”? (pg 6) • What about the other proverbs are shared in this chapter? • “the sun will shine on those who stand before it shines on those who kneel under them”. • “if a child washed his hands, he could eat with kings”
Unoka and Okonkwo • What are the obvious character differences we can infer between Unoka and Okonkwo?
Next Lesson • Read Chapter 2 • Consider • the Ibo traditions surfaced during the case of the killing of the wife of OgbuefiUdo. • What else we learn about Okonkwo’s character