Which recurring word in civil peace




















Yes, they were completely surprised. They were not ready for such an event. Question e. Why do the thieves call for the police? Answer : No body responses to Jonathan's cries for help, because they are all were afraid of them. The thieves might attack or loot them too. When nobody comes out for help, the thieves mock them by crying even louder. They also show how helpless the family is. Reference to the context. What does this expression reveal about his character? Explain by citing details from the story?

Answer : The phrase means anything can happen, but God is not puzzled as humans are. People should have faith in God. He knows how to solve every problem you have. In this story, this phrase comes as a refrain a line or statement that is often repeated.

This expression shows how optimistic Jonathan is towards his life. In the first, second and third places he has used it when something wonderful happens in his life. But lastly he uses it when he is robbed off his money. Though it may seem unusual, but it shows that he remembers God both in good and bad situations.

Question B : How does Jonathan change as he experiences the conflicts in his life.? Answer : He changes a lot. First, his belief in God grows. With a deep faith in God, he frees himself from the worries of life. This helps him to use his energy constructively to live in the difficult situations of war aftermath.

He develops some skills, through which he stands against the adverse situations. I swear to God. The only money i have, in this life is this twenty pounds egg-rasher they gave me today Who is the speaker?

Answer: Mr. Jonathan is the speaker. Who is the speaker talking to? Answer : He is talking to the leader of the thieves. Who does "they" refer to? Answer : "They" refers to the government employees. Question d. Nigerian English has words like soja 'soldier', and katakata 'confusion' 'trouble' derived apparently from English words but transformed by native languages' phonologies.

What does the author's use of dialect here add to the story? Answer : By the use of the dialect the writer gains two effects. First, he tries to give the readers a real feeling of the setting of this story. It suits Nigerian characters. Thus he gives a local colour to the story. Second, perhaps the writer wants to show the existence of both African dialect and British English as a result of colonialism.

Answer : This might be because they were the inhabitants who either never educated, or perhaps never interacted with a broader society. They were not educated and were not from the city. Question f. Do you think that the title of of this story is appropriate, or would "Civil War" have been a better title?

Answer: No doubt the title is ironical. There is no difference between the war and post war situation. There are still destruction, chaos, unemployment, and social crimes. Still I think it's an appropriate title.

Firstly, the time of the story is post war period. So it can never be named Civil War. Secondly, the title suggests peace will be restored gradually. Thus it gives an optimistic attitude. Reference beyond the text. How would describe the civil peace in Nigeria?

Answer : The civil peace in Nigeria isn't complete in real sense. Moving around Jonathan's story, we find that a real peace has not been established in the ebo society after it has been destroyed by the war. Jonathan is busy in collecting the torn parts of his life to resettle it.

The other miners are jobless, homeless and hopeless. There is complete unemployment. Anarchy still prevails there. There is no government protection to the citizen. Muggers rob people in the public places, and thieves visit and knock at doors asking for money without any fear of police.

People were on their own for their survival. Such a situation is only softened by the optimism of Jonathan with his life mantra "Nothing puzzles God". Question b : What kind of attitude towards life do you think you would have if your situation was similar to that of Jonathan's?

Answer: It needs to be a man of high optimism with firm determination with deep faith in God to be Jonathan. I am not that. I am a normal person like other co-sufferers of Jonathan who lacked his characteristics.

So, if my situation was similar to him, I would have been miserable, dejected and depressed. I would have been cursing my ill fate, visiting mines for them being re-opened. Question c: Draw the character sketch of Jonathan Iwegbu. Answer: Jonathan is the protagonist the leading character of this story.

The writer has presented him as an optimistic, industrious hard working resilient able to recover quickly from conditions character.

Unlike other survivors, he is not disheartened or depressed in the war-aftermath. With a deep faith in God, he endeavors to resettle his life, in which his family too helps him.

He never regrets the loss he had to bear in war period. He has even lost his son, which is an irreversible loss. But in spite of mourning, he accepts the situation.

To him every thing he got back is a miracle. He thinks himself to be 'extraordinarily lucky'. His life mantra is "Nothing puzzles God". Interpretation and Analysis of the Story. Writer: Chinua Achebe -- a Nigerian novelist, regarded as the most dominant figure in. Genre: a realistic story, a story about Civil War and the "civil peace" that. Publication: It was first published in the Nigerian journal Okikein and one year.

The setting: The setting of the story is Enugu, the former capital of Biafra Nigeria after the civil war. Get one wrong? We'll ask some follow-up questions.

Use it to prep for your next quiz! He had come out of the war with five inestimable blessings--his head, his wife Maria's head and the heads of three out of their four children. One day at the height of the war it was commandeered 'for urgent military action'. So Jonathan, suspecting he might be amenable to influence, rummaged in his raffia bag and produced the two pounds with which he had been going to buy firewood which his wife, Maria, retailed to camp officials for extra stock-fish and corn meal, and got his bicycle back.

He put it to immediate use as a taxi and accumulated a small pile of Biafran money ferrying camp officials and their families across the four-mile stretch to the nearest tarred road.

At the end of a fortnight he had made a small fortune of one hundred and fifteen pounds. Facts about how people lived during this time and what happened can be very beneficial in learning the themes of this story.

I think one of the themes is be thankful for what you have been given, which can be seen in the line that was repeated over and over. The line is "Nothing puzzles God. Culture also plays a big role in this story. Family seems to be a big part of it and a belief in God also prevails. As far as clues in the story, it is very easy to see that a war has gone on, that people are not in good financial standing, the country is a mess, and many people have lost family members and belongings.

All of these clues are important because they give you even more insight into the characters lives and allows you to read into the story more and understand the themes. I think one of the first things that should be researched are the war in Nigeria and the author. Just knowing information about the author helps alot. I have read another piece by Achebe and I know that he is Nigerian. Knowing this gives him even more credibility when reading this piece. I think it would also be interesting to research relations between people living in the country because we see that gangs of thieves were hurting their fellow Nigerians.

As in any story, culture is of utmost importance. It would be good to research African culture and how the Europeans affected this culture and how it changed after the war during the "Civil Peace. He completed college in Nigeria and received his B. Chinua Achebes short story, Civil Peace takes place after the Nigerian Civil War which lasted approximately thirty months.

May 30, , three Eastern states formed the Republic of Biafra which the Nigerian government responded to as an act of rebellion. By July, the fighting became a full-blown war in which about a million civilians died. The Biafran troops gained international support but in the end lacked the resources and organization to defeat the federal troops. By December 24, only two out of the original twelve provinces that formed the state of Biafra remained in the republic. January 15, the Biafran state formally surrendered.

Civil peace, begins with the protagonist, Jonathan Iwegbu, living in a military camp dealing with the aftermath of the war. He and his family. He starts his new life with minimal money but optimistically puts his family to work in order to make a living. He also deals with the crime and anarchy that faces him after the civil war in the anarchy of civil peace. Plot Summary A year after the Nigerian civil war, Jonathan Iwegbu and his family have remained positive despite the loss of their youngest son in the war.

Jonathan and his wife Maria scrounge around for what work they can find to make ends meet. Jonathan works taxiing wealthy officials and their families, and his wife works making food and drinks for soldiers and "other lucky people with good money.

Jonathan receives twenty pounds of ex gratia money because the government changed the currency after the war. That night, robbers awake Jonathan in the middle of the night to take his ex gratia money. They demand pounds from outside the window. Jonathan asks what they want with a man as poor as he is, so the robbers come inside to search for money. He only has the twenty pounds he'd received earlier that day, so they take that.

The robbery does not bother Jonathan, and the next day, he and his family go on with their normal activities. Jonathan's optimism allows him to recover from the war, during this time of "Civil Peace. Once again, his optimism prevails when he goes to the city to forage for goods to repair his house before everyone else. Later, he opens a bar, getting new employment rather than dwelling over the fact that his former job, mining coal, is no longer available.

At the end of the story, some of his money is stolen; however, despite the fact that his neighbors sympathize with him, he moves on with his daily activities.

The thieves come to Jonathan's house to rob him. Their heavy dialects indicate their ignorance, which is especially obvious when Jonathan speaks clearly. They are desperate people due to the war. Because of the civil peace, they can rob easily to get money.

Work Ethic In the story "Civil Peace" work ethic plays a significant role. Work ethic is depicted as a vitality.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000