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    The Power of Sisterhood: A Feminist Reading of The Color Purple In The Color Purple‚ there is clearly a Feminist Criticism approach displayed. In the opening pages‚ Alice Walker‚ examines the injustice and abuse felt by the main characters through descriptions of the events in which they suffer though. These actions interestingly follow along with the meanings of feminist Criticism. “Feminist criticism examines the ways in which literature (and other cultural productions) reinforce or undermine

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    Alice Walker is an American author and poet. She wrote the critically acclaimed novel The Color Purple (1982) for which she won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. She was the youngest of eight children‚ born in 1944 in Eatonton‚ Georgia‚ in the Deep South of the United States. When she eight‚ she was wounded in the eye by a shot from a BB gun fired by one of her brothers. This accident blinded her in one eye. As a result‚ she became more shy‚ thoughtful and studious; this is when

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    Courage of a Black Women

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    Revealed The story tells of one lady who goes through all kinds of hardships‚ discovers the proficient‚ content‚ and proud woman hidden inside of a young shut-mouthed girl. The Color Purple‚ the third novel written by the Pulitzer Prize winning author Alice Walker‚ has been both respected and berated in numerous essays and reviews. Although the critics agree to disagree about many aspects of this novel one thing is clear‚ The Color Purple shows that "the survival and liberation of black women through

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    Some critics consider the portrayal of Black men “The Color Purple as unnecessarily harsh and brutal. Examine the depiction of the Black male in Walker’s novel. “The Color Purple” was written by the author Alice Walker‚ she won a Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for the novel. The novel describes that the American South during the first half of the twentieth century at a time when the South was segregated and women were limited in what choices they were able to make for themselves. Celie

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    Celie In The Color Purple

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    The Development of Celie`s personality due to the Impact of other Women in the Novel The Color Purple “I`m pore‚ I`m black‚ I may be ugly and I can`t cook‚ a voice say to everything listening. But I`m here.” (p. 210) In the beginning of the book “The Color Purple”‚ the protagonist‚ Celie‚ is a ruined desperate woman. Her sole has been injured by her father`s violence‚ endless rules and orders‚ which she is forced to follow and ignorant indifferent people‚ who never show any concern for her

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    9/16/12 Period 1 Summer Reading Essay: The Lovely Bones There is always a time in a person’s life when they feel threatened by the fact that sometimes imminent death comes sooner to some than others. Alice Sebold talked about the results of that situation in The Lovely Bones. That person was‚ Susie Salmon‚ who was raped and killed on her way home from school‚ at the age of 14. The remaining four members of her family all deal differently with their grief throughout the book. Her father begins

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    Albert Camus

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    French Nobel Prize winning author‚ journalist‚ and philosopher. His views contributed to the rise of the philosophy known as absurdism. He wrote in his essay "The Rebel" that his whole life was devoted to opposing the philosophy of nihilism while still delving deeply into individual and sexual freedom. Although often cited as a proponent of existentialism‚ the philosophy with which Camus was associated during his own lifetime‚ he rejected this particular label.[1] In an interview in 1945‚ Camus

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    The Color Purple

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    "The Color Purple" by Alice Walker: Critical Analysis In Alice Walker’s The Color Purple‚ Celie leads a life filled with abuse at the hands of the most important men in her life. As result of the women who surround and help her‚ Celie becomes stronger and overcomes the abuse she experienced. The three most influential women in Celie’s life are here sister Nettie‚ her daughter-in-law Sofia and the singer Shug Avery. These are the women who lead Celie out of her shell and help her turn from and

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    lOVELY vONES

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    the Night-Time were both unique literary works. Alice Sebold and Mark Haddon are both very talented writers. Although they are both talented‚ their work differs in many ways. They differ in the portrayal of their subject matters‚ their writing styles and techniques‚ and whether or not the techniques were helpful toward each individual work. In The Lovely Bones‚ Sebold portrayed the subject matter lightly. It was not gory and gruesome‚ but it still depicted the repulsiveness and how horrifying it

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    Still Separate‚ Still Unequal “Still Separate‚ Still Unequal”‚ written by Jonathan Kozol‚ describes the reality of urban public schools and the isolation and segregation the students there face today. Jonathan Kozol illustrates the grim reality of the inequality that African American and Hispanic children face within todays public education system. In this essay‚ Kozol shows the reader‚ with alarming statistics and percentages‚ just how segregated Americas urban schools have become. He also brings

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