
The world is like a mask dancing. If you want to see it well, you do not stand in one place.
Biography
About Chinua Achebe
Chinua Achebe (1930–2013) was a Nigerian novelist whose debut *Things Fall Apart* (1958) is the most widely read novel in African literature, translated into more than 57 languages and selling over 20 million copies. Born in Ogidi in colonial Nigeria, Achebe studied at University College Ibadan and worked as a radio producer before publishing his landmark novel about pre-colonial Igbo civilization's collision with British colonialism. His subsequent novels — *No Longer at Ease* (1960), *Arrow of God* (1964), and *Anthills of the Savannah* (1987) — continued his examination of colonialism, corruption, and the postcolonial condition.
His essay "An Image of Africa" (1975) is one of the most influential critiques of Joseph Conrad's *Heart of Darkness*. He taught at universities in Nigeria and the United States for decades.
Key Themes
Wisdom
Chinua Achebe's Famous Quotes
“The world is like a mask dancing. If you want to see it well, you do not stand in one place.”
From Achebe's third novel set in Igbo-land under British colonial administration, this proverb is spoken to argue against rigid, single-perspective thinking. Achebe consistently used Igbo oral tradition — proverbs, riddles, ceremonies — to demonstrate that African epistemology was sophisticated and pluralistic long before Western contact.
“When the moon is shining the cripple becomes hungry for a walk.”
From Achebe's landmark debut novel, this line is a traditional Igbo proverb used to express longing — even a person who cannot walk dreams of movement when beauty appears. Achebe used proverbs extensively throughout the novel to demonstrate the richness of pre-colonial Igbo intellectual culture, countering the Western narrative that Africa lacked civilized tradition.
“Proverbs are the palm oil with which words are eaten.”
One of the most-quoted lines from Achebe's debut, this proverb is used by village elders in the novel to explain why wisdom requires rich language and metaphor rather than bare statement. "Palm oil" was the most valuable commodity in Igbo trade — using it to season words signals that language, like food, must be prepared properly to nourish. The line is also Achebe's artistic credo: form and content are inseparable.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Chinua Achebe (1930–2013) was a Nigerian novelist whose debut *Things Fall Apart* (1958) is the most widely read novel in African literature, translated into more than 57 languages and selling over 20 million copies. Born in Ogidi in colonial Nigeria, Achebe studied at University College Ibadan and worked as a radio producer before publishing his landmark novel about pre-colonial Igbo civilization's collision with British colonialism. His subsequent novels — *No Longer at Ease* (1960), *Arrow of God* (1964), and *Anthills of the Savannah* (1987) — continued his examination of colonialism, corruption, and the postcolonial condition. His essay "An Image of Africa" (1975) is one of the most influential critiques of Joseph Conrad's *Heart of Darkness*. He taught at universities in Nigeria and the United States for decades. Chinua Achebe lived 1930 – 2013.
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