Things Fall Apart

things fall apart (question in details)

the novel gives many wonderful insights into what is probably the oldest approach to social organization found in many variations around the world. Scholars call this a "kinship society." Characteristics of kinship society include the extended family (rather than the individual or the nuclear family) as the meaningful unit of social organization. Moreover, a strongly defined division of labor in terms of sex has been normal in kinship societies. There is also likely to be division in terms of age or other criteria. Can you think of why this might be so under conditions that existed before recent times? Certainly in many kinship societies it is common to speak of male dominance. What evidence of this do you find in the book? Is it the whole story? Does life in the kinship society give the individual more freedom of choice, or less than we are used to? Would the answer be different for Okonkwo? For his son, Nwoye? Okonkwo's wives? For the priestess?

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Sorry. your question is really essay related. This is only a short-answer space. You might begin by considering subsistence based societies that depended on extended families to feed themselves, care for small children, and basically survive.