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    Poisonwood Bible Essay

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    PWB Essay 6 February 2013 Rachel as America Barbara Kingsolver’s novel The Poisonwood Bible is a bildungsroman of a family that is moved to Africa by their evangelistic father. Kingsolver uses the characterization of the family to discuss western colonization and its negative side effects. Kingsolver uses Rachel’s character to critique the American culture through her language‚ materialistic nature‚ and refusal to accept the Congo. Kingsolver uses Rachel’s language to describe American culture

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    Poisonwood Bible Analysis

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    the authors of both Things Fall Apart and The Poisonwood Bible make the characters in both books more complex because not only do we read the discriptions the author has given us but also we see the use of symbolism that connects parts and objects in the book that we can recognize to give us a better idea of the characters. Chinua Achebe uses fire for Okonkwo to show his unstable personality. In The Poisonwood Bible Barbara Kingsolver uses the Poisonwood Tree to show Nathan’s ignorance and inability

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    Extension 1 English Assessment Task 2 Part 1: Written Report The Poisonwood Bible 1) Write a brief synopsis of the text. Identify the textual form‚ genre and provide the details of publication for your text. Barbara Kingsolver’s‚ The Poisonwood Bible‚ follows the lives of the Prices‚ a missionary family‚ who in 1959 leave their American lives for a small village in the Belgian Congo. Published in 1998‚ America‚ The Poisonwood Bible takes form as a fictitious historical‚ post-colonial text‚ denouncing

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    In The Poisonwood Bible‚ each character is affected by the Congo in their own way. Rachel was materialistic and self centered like her father. Rachel being the oldest of the sisters‚ she was the one who was used to the life in America. Rachel materialistic life and vanity was a cry for attention. Rachel was an exact copy of her father almost. She could take herself out of any situation that she did not want for herself. But she has the ability to use intelligence to survive. Ignorance is her physical

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    Individuality in characterization is what drives the story of a novel and many authors use this technique to their advantage. In The Poisonwood Bible‚ Kingsolver uses multiple points of view to reveal theme through characterization. The theme she conveys is the individuality present in one’s reaction to the surrounding people and environment. This characterization in relation to theme is shown through the voices of three of the four daughters‚ Rachel‚ Leah and Adah. Although each daughter is presented with

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    When the Price family is placed in a life or death situation‚ the daughters are forced to choose and bring their most valuable object with them. The Poisonwood Bible‚ written by Barbara Kingsolver‚ takes place in a small village named Kilanga during 1959. The family is in the Congo for a missionary mission to help the Congolese people and make the Congo a better place. When an ant invasion terrorizes the small village‚ the Price girls must make a quick decision on what to bring with them while the

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    Comp. II Name Instructor 13 march 2013 The Poisonwood Bible In life one comes to find that nothing is free. Everything has a price. Price also happens to be the last name of the family in the book “The Poisonwood Bible” by Barbra Kingsolver. This book is told through the eyes the four girls and their mother of the price family. Kingsolver shows the price these women paid to find their selves in the world through the neglecting of Nathan and the consequences of his decision. Orellana is the

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    Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible examines the culture and tragedies faced by the Congo in 1959. Narrated by the wife and 4 daughters of Baptist preacher Nathan Price‚ Kingsolver vividly displays how the family is impacted and change as a result of moving to the Congo. Growing up in Atlanta Georgia‚ living in Africa is a whole new experience completely different from home. Rachel‚ Adah‚ Leah and the Congolese all explore the importance and impact of faith‚ and a religion based on their own

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    A Hidden Strength The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver and Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte share similar connections in how they depict women. Both novels embody the idea that women are lesser than men. Each author sheds light on the issue of gender roles‚ and how woman are controlled by men. However once they break their submissive bond‚ the women find strength they never knew they had. Jane strives to please the men in her her life‚ this started at a young age due to the detached love she held

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    In Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible‚ Leah Price’s psychological and moral traits are shaped by her cultural‚ physical‚ and geographical surroundings. In the beginning‚ Leah is shaped by her father’s religious nature‚ the materialistic American society‚ and her native Bethlehem‚ Georgia. Over the course of the novel‚ Leah changes from a religious and materialistic child that only seeks her father’s approval to a more independent yet unreligious person that values the qualities in other people

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