This character changes the dynamic of the house as he helped groom Okonkwo son Nwoye into a better young man. But things of course head to a downfall when Ikemefuna had to be killed because the tribe ordered it. It seems like the narrator wants to show change as the reoccurring theme throughout the novel. It’s proven when Okonkwo was involved in an accidental shooting and is forced to exile the village for seven years. When Okonkwo does his time away he returns to Umuofia but things were very different from when he left as white missionaries have come to change their religion, customs, and apply a government. Throughout the novel you get a sense that the narrator views religion and customs as a very important aspect as those things come to be question when missionaries arrive to show the people a different way of life. But of course religion and customs are very important in the novel because these things are what affect the decision making and development of the Igbo people. Their everyday activities revolve around religion and what the Gods think is the next proper step. As you read parts when new characters come to play you can see that the narrator gives you a background of the individual and is categorize into a specific stature depending on the judgment of …show more content…
A man who shows weakness is categorize as a woman, which was one of the greatest insults a man can bear. The narrator goes into depth of the kind of dominant man Okonkwo was and how he was the ideal figure of a real man.
“Okonkwo ruled his household with a heavy hand. His wives, especially the youngest, lived in perpetual fear of his fiery temper and so did his little children. Perhaps down in his heart Okonkwo was not a cruel man. But his whole life was dominated by fear, the fear of failure and of weakness.” (p. 19). Seems like the narrator tries to specify that the key to a man’s success is determined by how strong and manly he may be. In another part of the novel you can see the narrator make symbolic meaning of particular crops on how manly a man is.
“His mother and sister worked hard enough, but they grew women’s crops, like coco-yams, beans and cassava. Yam, the king of crops was a man’s crop”.