Through the eyes of an enslaved woman, The Color Purple, narrates the story of Celie, who encounters complications along her journey to understand who God really is. The Color Purple is Alice Walker’s third novel published, and it won her the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book award <>. Within the book, themes of violence, religion, defying gender roles and femininity are mentioned throughout. Celie, a fourteen-year-old girl, writes letters to God about her daily encounters because of her repeated…
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Zora Neale Hurston and Alice Walker share many similarities in their work as Hurston had great influence on Walker’s writing. There is a strong connection between the two writers. Walker a contemporary woman writing critically successful work, and Hurston, almost a cultural figure who died in relative anonymity in the sixties. According to Mary Churchill, who wrote “Alice Walker and Zora Neale Hurston: The Common Bond” stated, “Walker seems to have found her muse in Hurston. Both literary tellers…
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The Color Purple, a dramatic, edgy, educational, award winning novel written by Alice Malsenior Walker. The novel not only tells a story but opens many eyes to multiple problems African American families faced in this time period. It also focuses on the lives of several African American women who faced abuse and cruelty. Walker shared many views, a contradiction to her personal views but very similar to her personal life. The award winning novel, The Color Purple, is a novel that unfolds in a series…
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The Color Purple is a story about an African American women named Celie that focuses on the numerous issues she encounters in the deep South. She delivers her experiences through a series of letters that are addressed to God and some to her sister Nettie, who’s a missionary in Africa. Celie writes to God and her sister Nettie because she has no one else. Through the repetition of motifs and symbols, Alice Walker is able to give everything a significant meaning to create various themes throughout…
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Alice Walker was born on February 9, 1944, in Eatonton, Georgia. She worked as a social worker, teacher and lecturer, and took part in the 1960s Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi. Walker won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her 1982 novel, The Color Purple, and is also an acclaimed poet and essayist. She brought black women’s lives into primary focus as a rich and important subject for US American literature. Her landmark novel The Color Purple (1982), which drew upon her sharecropper family’s…
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film adaptation of Alice Walker’s The Color Purple is about the life of Celie Harris who was a poor black girl married against her wish to an older black man. She was abused throughout her married life and she somehow finds a way to discover her own identity. The Color Purple deals with a very high power distance between men and women and black women were specifically mistreated not only by members of other races but also by men from their own race. Sisterhood in The Color Purple is one of the driving…
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One Will Take What He Is Given The purpose of Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple and Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is to demonstrate the hardships that are met when ignorance and tradition bring about the influence of sexism, racism and genuine prejudice to the general public. Ignorance is the root cause of prejudice as it prevents one to see beauty, so when it comes to dealing with the discriminating behavior held in this social order, the vast majority of people are judged by the label…
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E. R. Simmons Professor M. Lindsay English 201.001 8 October 2014 The Social Psychology Of An Oppressed Culture Ms Alice Walker's book, the color purple portrays many social issues that existed in the past and are still present in the twenty first century. In the Color Purple the social psychology of the Black people relate to the Hamitic Theory, by how people influence our thoughts, feelings and actions which greatly impacts the thoughts of…
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Independent Reading Assignment Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple tells the story of a woman who struggles through sexual and physical abuse but is able to find her own voice and her true self. Celie, starting off as an invisible powerless being that is abused by many, is able to recreate herself as a “virgin” and develop her own voice and sense of self-worth. By coming to terms with her homosexual feelings for Shug, she is able to find romantic fulfilment. Sofia, Celie’s friend, represents the…
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The novel, The Color Purple, by Alice Walker, analyzes many important themes including love. Through Walker’s depiction of Celie and Nettie’s relationship as well as Mr.___ and Harpo’s relationship, it is evident that love does not conform to gender roles nor stereotypes. The stereotypical romantic relationship is often depicted as a man in power and the classic ‘damsel in distress’. However, gender roles are challenged in the relationship Celie shares with Nettie; Celie sees her younger sister…
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