He begins in Things Fall Apart with the first incursion of the British into the Igbo region of what became the Eastern Region of Nigeria, and his subsequent novels trace (with some gaps) the spread of British influence into the 1950’s and beyond that into the postindependence period of the 1960’s. His five novels offer, in a sense, a paradigm of this clash. He avoids the emotionally charged subject of slavery and concentrates his attention on political and cultural confrontation. He may very well have written the first African novel of real literary merit-such at least is the opinion of Charles Larson-and he deals with what one can call the classic issue that preoccupies his fellow novelists, the clash between the indigenous cultures of black Africa and a white, European civilization. Chinua Achebe (1930 – 2013) is probably both the most widely known and the most representative African novelist.
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