How would Africa look today if it had never been colonised? What would our cultures look like? What would we believe about ourselves? And how different would our understanding of the people who ...
Nigerian-born author Chinua Achebe has died. The 82-year-old was best known for his gorgeously written historical novel that served as an indictment of colonialism, “Things Fall Apart.” Published in ...
The African writer and the English language / Chinua Achebe -- Igbo cosmology and the parameters of individual accomplishment in Things fall apart / Clement Okafor -- Eternal sacred order versus ...
In an exclusive report by Variety Magazine, Elba in collaboration with David Oyelowo is set to produce Things Fall Apart, a novel written by the Nigerian author, Chinua Achebe. The official logline of ...
In an exciting development for fans of literature and film alike, Idris Elba is set to take on the lead role in A24’s upcoming television adaptation of the seminal novel Things Fall Apart, penned by ...
AFAMAIN copy 39088020377131 Purchased from the Warren M. Robbins Library Endowment. "Since its publication in 1958, Chinua Achebe's Things fall apart has won global critical and popular acclaim.
Thirty-four years after it made its first appearance on a Nigerian television screen, Chinua Achebe’s classics Things Fall Apart, is making a return to the TV screen across the globe. The family of ...
Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe, whose novel “Things Fall Apart” is the most widely read book in African literature, will speak at Yale on April 14, as a guest of the Chubb Fellowship. Free and open to ...
"One of the most infuriating habits of these people was their love of superfluous words," thinks the colonial district commissioner to himself in the final chapter of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart ...
The acclaimed trilogy will be adapted for global television audiences. "The series will portray decades of wrenching societal change- from the end of the 19th century in 'Things Fall Apart', through ...
Christian missionaries in Congo in 1911. From the biography of Gwen Elen Lewis. Princeton Theological Seminary “One of the most infuriating habits of these people was their love of superfluous words,” ...