6. The difference between an employee and an independent contractor is that an independent contractor is one who, in exercise of an independent employment contracts to do a piece of work according to his own methods and is subject to his employer's control only as to the end product or final result of his work.…
Alice Walker's "Everyday Use" is the story of a woman, referred to as Mama, and her two daughters, Maggie and Dee. Mama and Maggie live together in their small home in a rural area. Dee has gone to college in a big city and is coming for a visit. Maggie is painfully self conscious, "chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle" with scars on her body from a house fire. Dee has always been scornful of her family's simple way of living and has been greatly influenced by her time away. Walker uses Maggie to explore the ideas of a family's heritage and history and, by contrasting her with Dee, voices a concern that in our search for our roots perhaps we are losing important aspects of our heritage.…
As the story begins, Maggie and her mother are extremely proud of who they are and where they come from. Dee, on the other hand, seems somewhat embarrassed to have the background of an African American. Maggie’s mother refers to her as “a large, big boned woman with rough,…
In the short story, "Everyday Use," Alice Walker teaches us lessons on true inheritance; what it is and who can receive it. Two hand stitched quilts become the center of conflict in the story. They are also used to symbolize the true inheritance. Like a quilt, a person's world view is made up of events, circumstances and influences that shape how they see and respond to the world. "Everyday Use" is a story of two worlds in conflict. Mama, acting as the narrator, guides us through the interaction of the two very different worlds embodied in her daughters.…
Alice Walker’s short story “Everyday Use” written in 1973 and it was widely studied and frequently anthologized short story, “Everyday Use” came out as one of the story collection In Love and Trouble. In “Everyday Use” she bring up many issue such as comparing relationship between heritage and tradition past. The story also question whether or heritage is something one use or something one possess.…
The story starts shifting when Dee tells her mother she has changed her name. Near the end, the mother realized that Dee is a fantasy child who is still frivolously careless of other peoples’ lives. (Baker, Pierce-Baker). Mama finally gains increasing emotional distance from Dee and is ultimately able to tell her “no.” (Hirsch). Mama snatches the quilts from Dee and gives them to Maggie, which makes Maggie smile sincerely. Mama knows that Maggie will truly appreciate and use the quilts instead of hanging them as a wall mounting as a symbol of a “simple upbringing”. Mama realizes that Maggie has had a better understanding of the meaning of heritage from the very…
Alice Malsenior Walker is an African American author and activist who write of various personal experiences, including the black woman’s struggle. Walker describes herself as a “womanist: a woman who loves other women… Appreciates and prefers woman culture, woman’s emotional flexibility… and woman’s strength… Loves the spirit… Loves herself, regardless”. Walker writes through her feelings and the morals that she has grown with. One of her famous quotes, "It is important to remember yourself," quoted from her appearance at a Miami Book Fair in 1989, where she discussed her 1988’s essay collection, including The Temple of My Familiar, relates to her short story Everyday Use. By not remembering who you are you can grow to be disconnected from yourself. Alice Walker’s short story Everyday Use successfully shows readers how it is possible for one to lose sight of what is important. This essay describes how Walker designed the story to reveal to readers the values of serving heritage and culture. Through the perspective of the protagonist “Mama,’ Walker shows the differences between the two sisters,…
Although humor is often used to entertain or lighten one’s mood, it can also change the world, if addressed correctly. In his 2004 novel Status Anxiety, Alain de Botton argues that humorists do not only play a large role in entertainment, but they also represent the people and their true underlying feelings on series topics. I strongly agree with de Botton’s stance on the role of humor and humorists in society because they allow people to discuss and raise awareness for controversial issues without restraint. Humorists are able to give observations on society’s complications in a way that is easy for people to understand. Alain de Botton clearly states that the chief aim of humorists is not only to entertain but "to convey with impunity…
a. Attention Getter: Most people that are the first in their family to get an education always will try to make their family members feel inferior and want to take advantage of them in every way possible.…
In Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use,” Mama, the narrator of the story, is rather distant with her daughter Dee and dreams about reconciling with her on a television show. Specifically, she imagines Dee expressing gratitude for all that she has done for her, while embracing her (Mama) “with tears in her eyes (Walker 315).” It is obvious that Mama doesn’t understand her daughter’s life choice to adopt an African lifestyle and feels that Dee is rejecting her origins and family. Furthermore, the reader can see that Mama has a troublesome relationship with Dee by the amount of tension between them. This strained relationship becomes clear when Dee “went to the trunk at the foot of (Mama’s) bed and started rifling through it (Walker 320).” The narrator…
“Everyday Use” is told from the perspective of Mama and takes place deep in the South sometime around the 1960’s. It is about a hard-working mother and her two daughters Dee and Maggie, and how she had to give each of them different paths to follow in life. Dee is the older sister. These paths both demonstrate how their heritage plays a role in their everyday lives. These routes resulted in Maggie having a better relationship with Mama than Dee had with her.…
Have you ever not seen eye to eye with your mother? In Alice Walker’s short story “Everyday Use”, we are shown how many of the choices we make and the things we value create our identity. This story focuses on two characters, mama and her daughter Dee (Wangero), who struggle to see the same way about their heritage. Dee wants the things made by her grandmother, to not admire it as an artifact, but rather to remake it. She wants to take them, and change them to match her lifestyle as it is today. She loves them for the way they look. Mama, on the other hand, views the things from her mother as artifacts. She loves the items more than how they look. She admires the quilts because of their everyday use. Transformations take place between these characters. Dee’s transformation is more external than it is internal. She shows her transformation in the way she speaks, the clothes she wears, and her judgement. Mama’s transformation is more internal. She begins to see Dee’s real thoughts, and she stands up against her. When she takes the quilts away from Dee, she doesn’t only stand up for herself, but Maggie, as…
In the short story "Everyday Use" by Alice Walker, the author chooses to place emphasizes the aspects of individuality. The story centers around the lives of two sisters, Maggie and Dee. Even though both sisters have grown up together under the same conditions, they clearly have become two very distinct individuals with contrasting views regarding their past, present, and future.…
Foremost, after Dee stops for a visit, Mama and Maggie can see that she is a different woman. She changes her name and believes that her understanding of heritage is what heritage is truly about. She enters the house and tries to take the quilts that are very important to Mama and Maggie, seeing that she believes she has to have it to support her “culture.” The text reads, “‘But they’re priceless!’ she was saying now, furiously; for she has a temper” (Walker 59). Here, Dee’s character getting furious because she is not receiving the quilts shows how much she has culture misunderstood. She believes in her immature mind that she has to obtain the quilts to support her with her heritage when she does not. As a result of her selfishness and corrupted views, it is clear to see that she does not understand what tradition is truly about. Later in the story, it is evident that Maggie has a full understanding of what heritage actually is because of what she so selflessly does. After Mama tells Dee she cannot have the quilts, maturely, Maggie allows Dee have the quilts. The story reads,”’She can have them, Mama,’ she said, like somebody used to never winning anything, or having anything reserved for her. ‘I can ‘member Grandma Dee without the quilts’”(Walker 59). This event portrayed here by Walker surely shows how mature and wise Maggie is. She understands that the quilts do not mean anything about heritage and that she can hold on to her grandmother without them. This event surely portrays the theme of a person does not have to possess worldly items to remember where they came…
Early in the story, the narrator describes Maggie. Although she loves her sister, Maggie acts nervous and ashamed around Dee. With burns and scars tracing her body, Maggie does not feel confident around Dee; she feels inferior. When Dee arrives at the house, Maggie gets afraid and tries to return to the house. She is uneducated, which makes her self-conscious. Maggie…