Bibliography On Things Fall Apart
Bibliography On Things Fall Apart
Aji, Aron, and Kirstin Lynne Ellsworth. “Ezinma: The Ogbanje Child in Achebe’s Things
Fall Apart”. College Literature 19.3 (October 1992) & 20.1 (February 1993): 170-
175. *
Akers Rhoads, Diana. “Culture in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart”. African Studies
Review 36.2 (September 1993): 61-72. *
Begam, Richard. “Achebe’s Sense of an Ending: History and Tragedy in Things Fall
Apart”. Studies in the Novel 29.3 (Fall 1997): 396-411. *
Bicknell, Catherine. “Achebe’s Women: Mothers, Priestesses, and Young Urban
Professionals”. Challenging Hierarchies. Issues and Themes in Colonial and
Postcolonial African Literature. Eds. Leonard A. Podis and Yakubu Saaka. New
York: Peter Lang, 1998. 125-136. *
Booker, M. Keith. “Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart”. The African Novel in English. An
Introduction. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1998. 28-64. ++
Brown, Lloyd W. “Cultural Norms and Modes of Perception in Achebe’s Fiction”. Critical
Perspectives on Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington
D. C.: 1978. 22-36. *
Carroll, David. “Things Fall Apart”. Chinua Achebe. 2nd ed. New York: St. Martin’s Press,
1980. 30-61. * ++
Gikandi, Simon. “Chinua Achebe and the Poetics of Location: The Uses of Space in Things
Fall Apart and No Longer at Ease”. Essays on African Writing 1. A Re-Evaluation.
Ed. Abdulrazak Gurnah. Oxford: Heinemann, 1993. 1-12. ++
-----. “Writing, Culture and Domination. Things Fall Apart”. Reading Chinua Achebe.
Language and Ideology in Fiction. James Currey: London, 1991. 24-50. *
Griffiths, Gareth. “Language and Action in the Novels of Chinua Achebe”. Critical
Perspectives on Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington
D. C.: 1978. 67-83. *
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Gunner, Elizabeth. “Things Fall Apart”. A Handbook for Teaching African Literature.
London: Heinemann, 1984. 45-50. *
Heywood, Christopher. A Critical View on Chinua Achebe´s Things Fall Apart. London:
The British Council, 1985. ++
Hoegberg, David. “Principle and Practice: The Logic of Cultural Violence in Achebe’s
Things Fall Apart”. College Literature 26.1 (Winter 1999): 69-79. *
Innes, C. L. “‘A Less Superficial Picture’: Things Fall Apart”. Chinua Achebe. Cambridge:
Cambridge, UP, 1990. 21-41. * ++
-----. “Language, Poetry and Doctrine in Things Fall Apart”. Critical Perspectives on
Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 111-
125. *
Irele, Abiola. “The Tragic Conflict in the Novels of Chinua Achebe”. Critical Perspectives
on Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978.
10-21. *
Iyasere, Solomon O. “Narrative Technique in Things Fall Apart”. Critical Perspectives on
Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 92-
110. *
-----. “Okonkwo’s Participation in the Killing of His ‘Son’ in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall
Apart: A Study of Ignoble Decisiveness”. CLA Journal 35.2 (March 1992): 303-
315. *
Jabbi, Bu-Buakei. “Fire and Transition in Things Fall Apart”. Critical Perspectives on
Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 135-
147. *
JanMohamed, Abdul. “Sophisticated Primitivism: The Syncretism of Oral and Literate
Modes in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart”. Ariel. A Review of International English
Literature 15.4 (October 1984): 19-39. *
Jeyifo, Biodun. “Okonkwo and His Mother. Things Fall Apart and Issues of Gender in the
Constitution of African Postcolonial Discourse”. Callaloo 16.4 (Fall 1993): 847-
858. *
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Ker, David I. “The Communal Perspective: Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and Arrow
of God”. The African Novel and the Modernist Tradition. New York: Peter Lang,
1997. 125-150. *
Killam, G. D. “Things Fall Apart”. The Novels of Chinua Achebe. New York: Africana
Publishing Corporation, 1969. 13-34. *
Korternaar, Neil Ten. “How the Centre is Made to Hold in Things Fall Apart”. Postcolonial
Literatures. Achebe, Ngügï, Desai, Walcott. Eds. Michael Parker and Roger Starkey.
New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995. 31-51. * ++
Larson, Charles R. “Okonkwo in His Time”. The World and I (March 1998): 299-311. *
Lindfors, Bernth (ed.). Approaches to Teaching Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. New York:
MLA, 1991. * ++
-----. “The Palm-Oil with Which Achebe’s Words Are Eaten”. Critical Perspectives on
Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 47-
65. *
MacKenzie, Clayton G. “The Metamorphosis of Piety in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall
Apart”. Research in African Literatures 27.2 (Spring 1996): 128-138. *
McDaniel, Richard Bryan. “The Python Episodes in Achebe’s Novels”. The International
Fiction Review 2.2 (July 1976): 100-106. *
Njoku, Benedict Chiaka. “Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart”. The Four Novels of Chinua
Achebe. New York: Peter Lang, 1984. 14-37. *
Nnaemeka, Obioma. “Gender Relations and Critical Mediation: From Things Fall Apart to
Anthills of the Savannah”. Challenging Hierarchies. Issues and Themes in Colonial
and Postcolonial African Literature. Eds. Leonard A. Podis and Yakubu Saaka.
New York: Peter Lang, 1998. 137-160. *
Nnoromele, Patrick C. “The Plight of a Hero in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart”. College
Literature 27.2 (Spring 2000): 146-156. *
Nwabueze, Emeka. “Theoretical Construction and Constructive Theorizing on the
Execution of Ikemefuna in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart: A Study in Critical
Dualism”. Research in African Literatures 31.2 (Spring 2000): 163-173. *
Obiechina, Emmanuel. “Narrative Proverbs in the African Novel”. Research in African
Literatures 24.4 (Winter 1993): 123-140. *
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O’Brien, Sara Talis. “Chinua Achebe and Things Fall Apart”. A Teacher’s Guide to
African Narratives. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1998. 7-23. *
Ogbaa, Kalu. “Literary Analysis: Unifying Elements of Things Fall Apart”. Understanding
Things Fall Apart. A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical
Documents. Westport, Connecticut and London: Greenwood Press, 1999. 1-19. *
Ogungbesan, Kolawole. “Politics and the African Writer”. Critical Perspectives on Chinua
Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 37-46. *
Ojaire, Tanure. “African Literature and Its Context: Teaching Teachers of Chinua Achebe’s
Things Fall Apart”. Women’s Studies Quarterly 35.3 (Fall 1997) & 35.4 (Winter
1997): 169-177. *
Okonkwo, Chidi. “Chinua Achebe: the Wrestler and the Challenge of Chaos”. Postcolonial
Literatures. Achebe, Ngügï, Desai, Walcott. Eds. Michael Parker and Roger Starkey.
New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995. 83-100. * ++
Opara, Chioma. “From Stereotype to Individuality: Womanhood in Chinua Achebe’s
Novels”. Challenging Hierarchies. Issues and Themes in Colonial and Postcolonial
African Literature. Eds. Leonard A. Podis and Yakubu Saaka. New York: Peter
Lang, 1998. 113-123. *
Osei-Nyame, Kwadwo. “Chinua Achebe Writing Culture: Representations of Gender and
Tradition in Things Fall Apart”. Research in African Literatures 30.2 (Summer
1999): 148-164. *
Palmer, Eustace. “Things Fall Apart”. An Introduction to the African Novel. New York:
Africana Publishing Corporation, 1972. 48-63. * ++
Peters, Jonathan. “Things Fall Apart: From Culture to Anarchy”. A Dance of Masks.
Senghor, Achebe, Soyinka. Washington D. C.: Three Continents Press, 1978. 93-
114. *
Quayson, Ato. “Realism, Criticism and the Disguises of Both: A Reading of Chinua
Achebe’s Things Fall Apart with an Evaluation of the Criticism Relating to It”.
Research in African Literatures 25.4 (Winter 1994): 117-136. *
Robertson, P. J. M. “Things Fall Apart and Heart of Darkness: A Creative Dialogue”. The
International Fiction Review 7.2 (Summer 1980): 106-111. *
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Stock, A. G. “Yeats and Achebe”. Critical Perspectives on Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes &
Bernth Lindfors (eds.). Washington D. C.: 1978. 86-91. *
Stratton, Florence. “How Could Things Fall Apart for Whom They Were Not Together?”.
Contemporary African Literature and The Politics of Genre. London and New
York: Routledge, 1994. 22-38. * ++
Talis O’Brien, Sara. “Chinua Achebe and Things Fall Apart”. A Teacher’s Guide to
African Narratives. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1998. 7-23. *
Traore, Ousseynou B. “Why the Snake-Lizard Killed His Mother: Inscribing and
Decentering ‘Nneka’ in Things Fall Apart”. The Politics of (M)Othering.
Womanhood, Identity, and Resistance in African Literature. Ed. Obioma Nnaemeka.
London and New York: Routledge, 1997. 50-68. *
Turkington, Kate. Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart. London: Edward Arnold, 1977. *
Weinstock, Donald, and Cathy Ramadan. “Symbolic Structure in Things Fall Apart”.
Critical Perspectives on Chinua Achebe. C. L. Innes & Bernth Lindfors (eds.).
Washington D. C.: 1978. 126-134. *
Wren, Robert M. “The ‘Pacification’ of Umuofia: Things Fall Apart”. Achebe’s World. The
Historical and Cultural Context of the Novels of Chinua Achebe. Washington D. C.:
Three Continents Press, 1980. 23-59. *