Preview

Handful By Sue Monk Kidd: Chapter Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
801 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Handful By Sue Monk Kidd: Chapter Analysis
“There was a time in Africa when people could fly like blackbirds.” Sue Monk Kidd opens the book with this concept while Charlotte is talking to her daughter, Handful. Right away she gives off the impression of Charlotte having a strong mindset and imagination that will be passed onto Handful. This interpretation is very important throughout the book as we read about Handful and Sarah growing up. The novel is divided into 6 sections while the chapters alternate from Sarah to Handful’s point of views. Within the chapters we learn about other characters and their stories from the girl’s perspectives. Originally, the book starts when they are young and don’t know about the world or their social status. Handful, a slave on the Grimke’s plantation …show more content…
From the beginning to the end, she uses vocabulary that gives off more of an old timey southern feel. For example, going to use the “privy” instead of the bathroom or using “grandeur” to describe how formal the balls and get togethers they had were. At times it was very difficult to understand what she was trying to get across with the vocabulary she used. The context clues around it helped me to figure out what she was saying. One thing I noticed about the author’s style is she likes to throw in phrases and repeat them. By doing this she makes readers mentally note in their head that it has a bigger meaning. Sarah shares during her first encounter with slave discipline how her mind kept telling her “Go Sarah,” and that was the start of her anti-slavery feelings in the book. From this point, she starts to have difficulty expressing her beliefs and the phrase “Go Sarah” pops into her mind. The author also uses phrases to set in personality traits for the characters. As Handful grows up on the plantation she begins to realize the limitations placed on her life. In one of her conversations with Sarah she says, “My body might be a slave but not my mind. For you it’s the other way around.” Handful believed there was a greater purpose in the world for her, but the only thing stopping her was the color of her skin. Meanwhile, the only thing

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    This heartfelt, captivating novel starts out with a very troubled fourteen year old girl named Lily Owens who lives with her father and their black maid Rosaleen. Her mother is dead due to an accident partially caused by Lily. As the story begins, Rosaleen gets thrown in jail and beaten up by three white men because all she wanted to do was to go into town and vote. Lily then decides it’s the time for them to run away to find the town Tiburon, South Carolina. This was the town written on the back of a picture of black Mary, which belonged to Lily’s mother.…

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the summer of 1940, World War II had been in progress for nearly a year. Adolf Hitler was victorious and planning an invasion of England to seal Europe’s fate. Everyone in the United States of America knew it. The Germans were too powerful. Hitler's Luftwaffe had too many planes, too many pilots and too many bombs and since Hitler was Europe's problem, the United States claimed to be a neutral country (Neutrality Act of 1939). Seven Americans, however, did not remain neutral and that’s what this book is about. They joined Britain's Royal Air Force to help save Britain in its darkest hour to fight off the skilled pilots of Germany's Luftwaffe in the blue skies over England, the English Channel, and North Europe. By October 1940, they had helped England succeed in one of the greatest air battles in the history of aviation, the Battle of Britain. This book helps to show the impact of the few Americans who joined the Battle of Britain to fight off an evil that the United States didn’t acknowledge at the time. The name of Kershaw’s book was inspired from the quote, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to sow few,” which was said by British Officer and Prime Minister Winston Churchill.…

    • 1089 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mayella Court Trial

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the book ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ a main part of the book showcases a court trial between a white woman and her father against a black man named Tom Robinson. ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ is set in a fictional town in Alabama called Maycomb and is set in 1933 to 1935 during the Great Depression. The narrator, Jean Louise Finch (Scout) leads us through three years of her life and shows what life was like in the South during the Great Depression. Jean Louise Finch gives us a view on how children think, learn, and understand how things work and why they work like they do.…

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In the year 1959 Nathan Price, a Baptist minister from the heart of the southern United States, volunteers himself along with his wife and four daughters to travel into the heart of the treacherous African Congo on a mission to convert non-Christian natives of the small village, Kilanga. From the beginning of The Poisonwood Bible, a novel by author Barbara Kingsolver the reader sees the underlying theme of guilt told through the eyes of the wife and daughters of the Price family, which can be linked to the cultural arrogance of American society of both the past and present. Orleanna, Nathan’s wife, not only explains her personal guilt, but through it provides a reflection of the author’s commonly shared perspective about the colonization of Africa. She says, “Sometimes I pray to remember, other times I pray to forget. It makes no difference” (Kingsolver 89). The individual stories of each Price girl, each with its own distinctive tone and language intertwine to define the dynamics of the Price family as a whole, and therefore serves as aid to relate to the Price family, their personal struggles and most importantly to many facets of societal perspectives associated with Africa. This cultural arrogance is portrayed through the unique style of narration for each character and are also expressed extensively through the certain American characters found in the novel.…

    • 1417 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Witch of Blackbird Pond

    • 846 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the book “Witch of Blackbird Pond”, in this essay referred to as WBP, the protagonist Katherine Tyler, affectionately referred to as Kit, is an orphaned fifteen year old girl who grew up on the tropical island of Barbados where her grandfather had supported her till her current age when he died and left the family debt and affairs in her young and incapable hands. Kit however being a smart child sold their plantation and slaves, and everything but her own clothes to pay off the debt,…

    • 846 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Point/Purpose: The classic novel The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver, features, among her three other sisters and mother, Ruth May Price, who is the 5 year old daughter of Reverend Nathan Price, who has been stationed in the Congo for a mission trip in the name of the Baptist Church in the year 1959, a time when many of the racial biases and attitudes toward Africans and women are still prevalent in the US, especially the Prices home state of Georgia. These biases and views have rubbed off on Ruth May, who as a young child absorbs and regurgitates all that she hears and experiences, which is why Ruth May represents the ignorance of some Western views towards the customs and general bias towards anyone with an African background. However, as she is integrated into her new society, Ruth May is able to befriend the entirety of the children in the settlement.…

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Both Sarah Grimké and her personal maid in waiting, Hetty Handful Grimké, experience oppression. Sarah, a white daughter of the wealthy Grimké family, encounters the wrath of sexism. While growing up, Sarah admires her father and older brother, for they are both practicing law, which she aspires to do. They encourage Sarah to disclose her opinions on the matters of law that the men are discussing. However, as Sarah expresses her ambition to be a jurist, she is ridiculed by the men who were once her idols because they believe, “For a woman to aspire to be a lawyer—well, possibly, the world would end” (Kidd…

    • 106 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story begins with Anne as a four-year-old child watching her parents work everyday for Mr. Carter, a white plantation owner. She witnessed several black farmers living in rotten, two-room wooden shacks. It was most likely evident to her, even at that early age, that Whites were the affluent, upper-class.…

    • 785 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Over a three year span, the novel follows Atticus’s and especially his children’s reticule before the trial for defending a black man. Even though the community of Maycomb is racist, Atticus stands by his choice to defend the black man, Tom Robinson. His kids stand by him as well, even sitting in the colored balcony to watch the trial. Atticus makes a great case proving Robinson not guilty; yet, the white jury convicts him. He is later shot trying to escape. Even after the trial Atticus and his family still face problems for defending Robinson. At the end, Scout, one of Atticus’s children, truly realizes that the barrios between blacks and whites need to come down.…

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Charlotte Phelan, a women who,like most white women in that day, hired an African American maid(known as the help) to raise her child so she would not have to alter her lifestyle because of her own child. In Charlotte’s own eyes, it was an unfortunate burden that her daughter Skeeter had seen life differently and was not a supporter of segregation or any other type of prejudice shown…

    • 133 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Growing Up In Slavery

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In this book, it explains the distress and grief these slaves had to face in their everyday lives. There is ten slaves and each of them wrote their own story about what they had to face each and everyday. For example, one of the slaves is Frederick Douglass. He was the most famous African American of the nineteenth century. This book, sets back into the eighteen hundreds and kids at eight years old would be taken away from their loved ones and were put to work like cattle by their new possessor. For example, Frederick Douglas at the age of eight was taken from his mother without even saying goodbye. Douglas had to call his new controller Aunt Kathy or he would get a flogging. He explains the misery he had to sustain and how many times he was beaten or punished to starve. For example, he wrote about his new owner Kathy, “The cheerful eye, under the influence of slavery, soon became red with rage; the voice, made all of sweet accord changed to one harsh and horrid discord; and that angelic face gave place to that of a demon”. (Taylor, 2005, p. 58). Each slave at the end of their story explains their after life. Growing Up In Slavery makes you think of life in other people’s shoes and how it would make you feel if you were them.…

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Two children living in different times and have different color of skin share the same struggle. Even though they are so far apart both Wright and Walls suffer as equally as the other. Both protagonists have to do things that they do not want to just too barely make it, and they have to overcome obstacles to achieve their dreams that ended up far greater than what they had expected. Both Wright and Walls use specific character traits to overcome their obstacles such as the traits of being independent, and having perseverance, and courage, and these character traits helped them throughout their life time, and greatly impacted them as they got older.…

    • 1221 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “I am African by accident, not by birth. So while soul, heart, and the bent mind are African, my skin barely begs to differ and is resolutely white”(Fuller, 2001, Readers Guide). These are the words of a white settler who matured and found her identity on the dark continent. During the twentieth century, much of Africa was colonized by colonial powers, as a result, the land endured intense warfare and eventually the crucible of decolonization, or the freeing of a colony from dominance. From a young age, Alexandra Fuller, or Bobo, found herself experiencing these hardships by living on the outskirts of a war zone in Africa, or the land she knows as home. She writes about her experiences in the reading, Don't Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight.…

    • 1162 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Picture a majestic, white plantation house, surrounded by acres and acres of golden crops and trees ripe with fruit. Inside the house, children run down the softly carpeted hallways, their laughter tinkling with innocent joy. The Master and the Lady of the house sit in the parlor, he smoking a pipe, and she embroidering. All reigns peacefully in this southern utopia. All except for the slaves. The individuals hidden behind the drapes, quietly bringing in the food, brushing away the dust, and pouring their life energies into tilling and working the land. The young man, who feels the harsh lash of the whip every time he makes a noise appears, opens the house door to let in guests. The woman who struggles everyday to scrape together enough food to feed her family, attends to the Master’s children, organizing heaps of toys and clothes into tidy piles. Such was the harsh, paradoxical reality of the Grimké sisters, whose upbringing on a wealthy South Carolinian farm boded nothing for them but the expectations of a life a luxury, based on a strong foundation of slave labor and discrimination. Yet Sarah and Angelina defied expectation, and moved North upon reaching adulthood. There they began to actively fight slavery, attending rallies and speaking out against the inhumanities they had observed. By examining detailed accounts of their childhood experiences, and their subsequent reactions to the brutality they witnessed, the path and impact of the abolitionist activism promoted by the two sisters can be traced. The trail of their journey follows a road that includes letters written to influential activists, a New England tour widely considered controversial, and speaking in front of Congress. The pamphlets, books, and speeches written by and about Angelina and Sarah Grimké reveal the horror and violence behind, as well as provide evidence against, the seemingly peaceful southern culture. Thus, the Grimké sisters’ first-hand…

    • 1475 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Book Review on Black Boy

    • 992 Words
    • 4 Pages

    his mother is at work. Then the Wrights move to the home of Richard's Aunt Maggie. But…

    • 992 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays