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Chinua Achebe and Albert Camus: Okonkwo's suicide in Things Fall Apart and The Vision of the Absurd
Author(s) -
M.H.S. Minima,
Peter Nyah
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
afrrev ijah an international journal of arts and humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2227-5452
pISSN - 2225-8590
DOI - 10.4314/ijah.v6i2.6
Subject(s) - absurdism , compromise , contradiction , cowardice , alien , character (mathematics) , psychoanalysis , philosophy , government (linguistics) , aesthetics , sociology , history , law , psychology , political science , epistemology , politics , linguistics , geometry , mathematics , citizenship
This paper discussed Camus’ Vision of the Absurd as demonstrated by Chinua Achebe in Things Fall Apart through his Character, Okonkwo. Using sociological and psychological details, it considered the issue of suicide as the absurd outcome of an upsetting effect of the new world order and a contradiction or divorce between man and his setting. This paper also brought to bear the unacceptable terms of life under a treacherous and alien government where the governed would prefer death to a life of compromise and of cowardice.

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