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Things Fall Apart: Chapters 14-19 - Quiz
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What does Okonkwo's reception in his mother's home village reveal about the culture of the Igbo people? What values do they hold dear? Do you think it would have been different if Okonkwo's crime had not been accidental?
Describe the isa-ifi ceremony of confession related in Chapter 14. How does it reflect the patriarchal (male-dominated) nature of Igbo society? What is the punishment for not answering truthfully? Does the ceremony serve any practical purpose?
Analyze Uchendu's conversation with Okonkwo that close Chapter 14. Carefully trace his questions, their answers, and the wisdom he draws from them. Does Uchendu's argument in any way lessen the sense of male dominance in that society? We are not informed in any way of Okonkwo's immediate reaction to this "talking to" by his uncle. What do you suppose he said and did? Consider the name Okonkwo gives to his first child born in exile.
Working with a partner, create a dialogue that might have taken place between two of the villagers of Mbanta just after the Christians were ostracized. You might want to have one speaker play the part of a convert to Christianity while the other plays the part of a devotee of the Igbo religion. You may make the speakers any age above thirteen.
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