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    English Literature and Composition 19 April 2012 Amethysts of Hope Women‚ it seems‚ tend to consistently get the fuzzy end of the lollipop. Men sometimes feel the need to discriminate against women to feel like they have a sense of power. In Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple‚ the female characters are continually oppressed. From the very beginning of the novel‚ the main character‚ Celie‚ along with the other female characters‚ is discriminated against because she is an uneducated black woman

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    understanding of who you are. It apart of your DNA. In the short story‚ “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker‚ the author is telling a story inside of a story by using symbolism‚ irony‚ and characterization to show the importance of family heritage. It plays a big role in African American culture and she use the three main characters Maggie‚ Dee‚ and Mama to help get her point across. X x xx x x x x x x Alice Walker uses the quilt to symbolize family heritage. The grandmother made the quilt by hand with

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    Purple (An Analysis of Alice Walker’s The Color Purple) Alice Walker once said‚ “The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.” In her novel The Color Purple‚ Alice Walker shows a theme of powerlessness‚ until the very end‚ where the protagonist prevails. Throughout the story‚ the reader experiences multiple plot twists and emotional scenes. Alice Walker shows three predominant themes in her story The Color Purple. The first message Alice Walker sends through The

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    song titled “Just Like Fire” after she was asked to write a song for the movie Alice Through the Looking Glass.

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    Culture and identity shapes and molds society as we know it today. Culture and Identity includes social class‚ generation‚ religion and nationality. It also gives us an understanding of how other races and organization work. The best way to fully understand one’s culture and identity is to not judge their ways of doing something or how they handle a certain situation. With this being said‚ there are many different things we can learn from culture and identity‚ it opens our mind to new possibilities

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    2. In “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker‚ Maggie and her mother’s relationship is depicted as tight-knit. This can be interpreted throughout the story because Mama describes how they spend the majority of their time together. An example of this is when Mama says‚ “Maggie will marry John Thomas… then I’ll be free to sit here and I guess just sing church songs by myself”‚ implying that they normally sing together. Mama also predicts Maggie’s actions. She predicts how Maggie will “be nervous until her sister

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    Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” is a short story that describes a mother and her two daughters that have different personalities. Mrs. Johnson’s daughters‚ Dee and Maggie‚ grew up in the same house around the same time but have experienced different lives. Throughout the story‚ the mother depicts the different personalities and physical features of her two daughters. The traits that each daughter possess are displayed when Dee returns home for a visit. Mrs. Johnson’s older daughter‚ Dee‚ is a self-centered

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    In “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker‚ a family of three women stand in their lawn watching smoke tumble out from where their windows used to be and study their shingles as they disintegrate. The youngest woman‚ Maggie‚ has the most traumatic experience of the three: she was caught in the fire and was severely burned and scarred. The image of her daughter suffering was burned into her mind. The mother was affected by this and also by how her other daughter‚ Dee‚ reacted to this. Dee was content with

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    Especially after the passing of the Civil Rights Act in 1964‚ African Americans were ready to invent a new kind of modernism. This might best be shown by the character Dee in Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use”‚ in which she changes her name and style because it is the new‚ popular thing to do. The quilts that Dee loved so much could be said to symbolize different patches of black culture being stitched together in unity to form something

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    their day-to-day life. Our custom‚ beliefs‚ morals and the way we view the world are most likely to be influenced by society and culture in which we exist in. Hence we become end product of the culture surrounding us. Both authors Julia Alvarez and Alice Walker were mutually influenced by their life experiences but their stories present an extreme different trend by which people adjust to a new culture. Alvarez‚ who is a Dominican reflects part of her life experience growing up as a girl in her story

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