Chinua Achebe’s short story “The Sacrificial Egg” intricately weaves a narrative that interrogates the dialectical tensions between indigenous African cosmologies and the epistemological disruptions engendered by Western modernity. Through the figure of Julius Obi-a Western-educated clerk oscillating between rationalist skepticism and cultural inheritance-the story problematizes the linearity of civilizational progress and exposes the ontological entanglements inherent in postcolonial identity formation. Set against the backdrop of an epidemic that metaphorically and materially fractures the socio-economic fabric of Umuru, Achebe re-inscribes the sacred within the quotidian through culturally embedded symbols such as the titular sacrificial egg. Drawing from critical insights on cultural hybridity and meaning-making politics, this article explores how the story mobilizes Igbo oral traditions, symbolic spatiality, and linguistic situatedness to foreground the persistence of belief systems that modernity ostensibly seeks to efface. Rather than positing a binary between the traditional and the modern, Achebe’s narrative discloses the psychic dissonance and affective ambivalence experienced by postcolonial subjects as they navigate a terrain of conflicting ontologies. In doing so, the story resists essentialist readings of culture and instead articulates a nuanced vision of hybridity as both rupture and synthesis, disorder and continuity.
Anup Kumar Nepal (Sun,) studied this question.