Social Fragmentation in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and Head’s Maru: A Comparative Study

Godwin Yao Gaaku, Selina Ewoenam Ahorsu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This qualitative research sought to do a comparative analysis of social fragmentation in Things Fall Apart and Maru. Textual analysis was employed to analyse, interpret and evaluate the two novels in the light of postcolonial criticism, focusing on otherness. The researchers engaged the texts in multiple readings to gain a descriptive understanding of them and take descriptive notes at every stage of reading. Excerpts were purposefully sampled from the novels and analysed thematically. The study revealed that in pre-colonial Africa, social fragmentation resulted from classism, patriarchy and bad tradition; hence, the society operates in a binary relationship. In colonial Africa, social fragmentation resulted from religion and racism. However, post-colonial Africa experienced the deepest form of social fragmentation; spiced by tribalism and other pre-colonial factors. The study concluded that both novels confirm the concept of ‘otherness’. So, future research can focus on emotional and structural fragmentations.
阿契贝的《东西散架》和海德的《丸》中的社会分裂:比较研究
本定性研究试图对《分崩离析》和《丸》中的社会碎片化进行比较分析。本文运用文本分析法在后殖民批评的视角下对两部小说进行分析、解读和评价,重点关注小说的他者性。研究人员对文本进行多次阅读,以获得对文本的描述性理解,并在阅读的每个阶段做描述性笔记。有目的地从小说中抽取节选,并按主题进行分析。研究表明,在殖民前的非洲,社会分裂是由阶级主义、父权制和不良传统造成的;因此,社会在二元关系中运作。在殖民时期的非洲,宗教和种族主义导致社会分裂。然而,后殖民时代的非洲经历了最严重的社会分裂;受到部落主义和其他前殖民因素的影响。研究得出的结论是,两部小说都证实了“他者”的概念。因此,未来的研究可以集中在情感和结构碎片上。
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