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    Sula Study Guide

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    metaphorically‚ instead of literally. Because the novel is so short (174 pages) you need to read carefully. Discussion questions: 1. Sula is in many ways a study of opposites (think about characters‚ setting‚ and themes) Find an example where Morrison explores these opposites- how do they play off each other? What is the author trying to say? 2. Also consider how men are portrayed in the novel. Think about male characters‚ like Boy Boy‚ Tar Baby‚ Plum‚ Chicken Little‚ Shadrack‚ and Ajax.

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    Harry Potter Hour 6 Female Identity in Literature 18 October 2010 The Role of Motherhood in Sula by Toni Morrison As seen by many different mothers in the novel Sula by author Toni Morrison‚ mothers play an important part in kid’s life‚ shaping how they view different beliefs in the world and setting up values in their child. Every individual’s life is shaped by personal relationships they have with others. The mother and child relationship greatly affects the identity development in the

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    Parental guidance and support are key components of the foundation of a child’s growth and development. Without either‚ a child cannot grow and develop properly. In her novel The Bluest Eye‚ Toni Morrison examines the effect of different mothers on their respective children through the characters of Mrs. MacTeer and Mrs. Breedlove. Throughout the novel‚ both characters express their thoughts and feelings through words‚ with Mrs. MacTeer having a few fussy soliloquies and Mrs. Breedlove having a few

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    Twyla vs Hazel

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    perceived as such. Morrison and Bambara have written two‚ very easily relatable stories of a couple of girls who are stuck right in the middle of this very struggle. The characters Hazel and young Twyla bare resemblance in numerous ways. Both young ladies are very young‚ have very naïve views of the world‚ and have been disappointed by an adult in their lives. In Recitatif‚ Twyla’s young age is revealed early on: “We were eight years old and got F’s all the time.” (Morrison 130) Hazel’s youth becomes

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    Research Paper On Beloved

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    A Fading Memory The novel Beloved‚ by Toni Morrison‚ illuminates the memory of slavery through history and the past. In remembering and exploring the trauma that slavery bestowed upon its victims‚ Morrison sheds light on an institution that denied people of a certain color the right to an existence and furthermore‚ an identity. Identity‚ the fact of being who or what a person or thing is‚ is an essential aspect of the novel that highlights a basic right stolen by slave owners. In the present day

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    Sula Good vs Evil

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    Evil Toni Morrison writes the book Sula with the intention of questioning the idea of good versus evil. “The novel invokes oppositions of good/evil‚ virgin/whore‚ self/other‚ but moves beyond them” says Deborah E McDowell( 82). The characters in Sula give the novel its great interest by using different behaviors and qualities for each character to prove the author’s intention. Sula has established its purpose in writing through the characters to inform others on good versus evil. Toni Morrison makes

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    Bluest Eye

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    At the end of chapter 8 in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye‚ the reader is reminded of a graphic scene that was mentioned on the first page of the book between a father and his daughter. In this chapter‚ Cholly comes home very drunk and rapes his daughter‚ Pecola. While almost all of Morrison’s readers cannot understand‚ at the beginning of the book‚ how a man could impregnate his own daughter‚ they later start to grasp at why Cholly could do such a thing because of his past. Tragically‚ Cholly is

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    The Bluest Eye‚ by Toni Morrison‚ depicts characters desperately seeking to attain love through a predetermined standard of beauty established and substantiated by society. Morrison intertwines the histories of several characters portraying the delusions of the ‘perfect’ family and what motivates their quest for love and beauty. Ultimately‚ this pursuit for love and beauty has overwhelming effects on their relationships and their identity. Pecola Breedlove is young black girl who believes she

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    Paradox In Sula

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    Hoffarth-Zelloe‚ Monika. “Resolving the Paradox?: An Interlinear Reading of Toni Morrison’s Sula.” The Journal of Narrative Technique‚ Vol. 22‚ No. 2‚ 1992‚ 114-127. Monika Hoffarth-Zelloe’s article explores the idea of a double‚ if not a split form of self that provides to be a common theme throughout Sula‚ and how it applies to the idea of individual freedom and equality. She begins with the characters Nel and Sula‚ and suggests these two separate beings represent Morrison’s own internal contradictions

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    The Bluest Eye

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    qualities in any of the men of The Bluest Eye are hard to come by. There are many factors that come into play that have shaped the personalities of all of these males. The female characters in the novel endured a lot in coping with the males. Toni Morrison does an exceptional job of painting a vivid picture of the social climate of America in the 1960’s and society’s affects on the people of The Bluest Eye. In a variety of ways‚ the males of The Bluest Eye have many issues in their past that cause

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