Navigating Hybridity: The Complex Interplay of Identity and Belonging in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart.
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UNIVERSITY OF AIN TEMOUCHENT
Abstract
This thesis explores the impact of colonialism on the personal identities and
psychological states of characters in Things Fall Apart (1958). Throughout the novel,
colonialism has influenced tribes beliefs and individual lives, particularly Okonkwo’s,
who is torn between traditional Igbo customs and the new colonial order. This work aims
to investigate the internal struggles faced by individuals as they try to deal with the
shifting cultural forces that were brought by colonial rules. Moreover, it examines the
themes of displacement, alienation, and identity crisis by highlighting the cultural
breakdown, identity confusion, and hybridization in the postcolonial African literature.
Hence, the present research digs deeply in these tensions through the lens of Frantz
Fanon’s analysis of alienation and cultural stereotyping, as well as Homi’s Bhabha’s
theories of hybridity and notion of the Third Space Ultimately, this research argues that
colonialism not only fractures traditional cultural structures but also creates internal
tension, shaping hybrid identities that leaves individuals suspended between the past and
the unfamiliar colonial present.
