Alice Walker’s, The Color Purple, is a candid story told by an African American woman named Celie. There are four main characters in this novel and their stories are told by a woman who is treated as an inferior and a slave by her husband and the general community. Celie was repeatedly raped as a child and Walker drew from the emotional trauma of Celie’s youth to form a powerful storyline that was influenced by the theme and characterization. Opening the narrative with a teenage version of Celie, Walker implements crucial information for the readers to grasp the emotional toll Celie’s rape conveys. Raped by her stepfather, Celie is powerless to his abuse. Her stepfather, Alphonso warns and threatens her to keep quiet, “Better not never tell nobody but God”. With this statement, the reader learns why Celie writes letters to God and why she is the most frank in these letters. Celie decants her story to God and remains passive in her material life. The main theme of the story, the power of an individual’s voice, coincides with the abrupt loss of Celie’s youthful innocence. As the story progresses the theme becomes more powerful …show more content…
With characterization, Walker develops several individuals’ experiences and attitudes. Celie’s characterization was the most significant to the plot, but Mr. ____ and Shug Avery also had key transformations. Mr. ____, Celie’s husband, was for the majority of the story uncaring and abusive. He beat Celie like an animal and hid letters from Celie’s sister, Nettie, for years. It is Celie’s discovery of Mr. ____’s deception that spurs an argument and significant development for both Celie and Mr. ____. After Celie returned from her time away with Shug, Mr. ____ reformed his life and expressed equality toward Celie. In the closing chapters, there is a scene where Celie and Mr. ____ are sewing together and conversing
The Color Purple by Alice Walker is the story of a poor black woman living in the south between World War 1 and World War 2. This was at a time when, although slavery had ended,many women were still virtually in bondage, and had to put up with many conditions that was reminiscent of the days of slavery. The problem was that they had to endure being treated like an inferior being by their own families sometimes, as well as from the white people that lived there. It was a life that was filled with misery for many black women, and they felt helpless to do anything about their situations.
Celie practically struggled for happiness her whole existence. Her father sold her to a man who had no intent of loving or caring for her. Celies’ husband whom she refers to as Mr. physically and verbally abused her. Mr. felt that the only way to keep a woman in check was to beat her and he did just that throughout the movie. Like any woman would though the abuse Celie lost herself and respect for herself. Living with Mr. was a life full of darkness and hatred. Life with her husband was no better life than life with her stepfather. It took years for Celie to become brave enough to fight back for what she accept as true and gain understanding of how to convey amusement and have little outlook on life. After years of abuse, Celie no longer was afraid of Mr. She no longer cared for her husband or the
New in Mr. ___________’s house, Celie is constantly beaten for not doing exactly everything that her husband demands of her. In a letter to God, Celie recalls, “Harpo ast his daddy why he beat me. Mr. ___________ say, Cause she my wife. Plus, she stubborn. All women good for- he don’t finish. He just tuck his chin over the paper like he do. Remind me of Pa” (22). Celie lives in a house where getting beaten is the normal thing, she does everything that is asked of her and more, and it is still not enough for Mr. ___________. Also, Celie mentions that it reminds her of her “Pa”, which means that she faced this type of torture for her entire life. Walker highlights the fact that Celie needs someone else to survive, her undeserving husband will not be enough to make Celie want to survive and go on.
Alice Walker grew up in rural Georgia in the mid 1900s as the daughter of two poor sharecroppers. Throughout her life, she has been forced to face and overcome arduous lessons of life. Once she managed to transfer the struggles of her life into a book, she instantaneously became a world-renowned author and Pulitzer Prize winner. The Color Purple is a riveting novel about the struggle between redemption and revenge according to Dinitia Smith. The novel takes place rural Georgia, starting in the early 1900s over a period of 30 years. Albert, also known as Mr._____, and his son Harpo must prevail over their evil acts towards other people, especially women. Albert and Harpo wrong many people
There are numerous works of literature that recount a story- a story from which inspiration flourishes, providing a source of liberating motivation to its audience, or a story that simply aspires to touch the hearts and souls of all of those who read it. One of the most prevalent themes in historical types of these kinds of literature is racism. In America specifically, African Americans endured racism heavily, especially in the South, and did not gain equal rights until the 1960s. In her renowned book The Color Purple, Alice Walker narrates the journey of an African American woman, Celie Johnson (Harris), who experiences racism, sexism, and enduring hardships throughout the course of her life; nonetheless, through the help of friends and
Firstly, The Color Purple (1982) is written by the African- American novelist Alice Walker. For creating such an innovative novel, Alice Walker’s The Color Purple won both the Pulitzer Price and the National Book Award. Walker initiated her novel by a confession that The Color Purple is her spiritual journey and the female protagonist represents her during this journey. The novel is made up of 90 letters written by Celie to God and some of these letters are written by Nettie to her sister Celie. These letters are similar to a diary that Celie finds as a way to express her feelings , emotions and thoughts in a place she is not permitted to be free. Generally, the novel portrays a life and a journey of a young fourteen -year- old black girl who is persecuted throughout her life from her stepfather who repeatedly raped her and forced her to marry a cruel man who, in turn, oppressed her.
Walker’s theme of writing is straight forward, she express through emotions and sexual conduct. Alice Walker adds, “The worse thing than being a woman is being a black woman” (282). The novel: The Color of Purple tells about the leading character Celie that writes down her deepest thoughts of unhappiness and sorrow in her diary. Celie was sexual assaulted by the man she called father, and she later conceives a child, that child was taken away from her at the age of fourteen. For example, Celie was not attending school, she felt rejected and unattractive. Celie stayed at home
The Color Purple is an honest emotional story about love, trust, respect, separation, friendships, and the bond between sisters. It was published back in 1982 by Alice Walker. Walker is a huge activist, and even participated in the 1960’s Civil Rights Movements in Mississippi. Throughout her novel she uses excellent rhetoric to convey her strong emotions. The Color Purple uses ethos to show you how horrible abuse is, logos to help give the characters confidence, and pathos to convey the pain.
Alice Walker is a world renowned novelist, poet, short story author and political activist, with works including The Temples of my Familiar and In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens. Yet Ms. Walker’s most critically acclaimed novel remains The Color Purple. The Color Purple tells the complex tale African American women, their brutal living conditions, everyday abuse, and their instinct to survive. The Color Purple was an immediate success due to its simple writing style, the intricate storyline, and compelling characters. In 1983 The Color Purple was recognized for these very reasons and graciously awarded The Pulitzer Prize For Fiction. Every year several Pulitzer Awards are handed out to distinguished
The Colour Purple is a novel that was written by the 1983 Pulitzer Prize winner, Alice Walker. The Novel was published in 1982 and was later turned into a film by Steven Spielberg in 1985. The book is about a young girl, Celie who was oppressed and seek to find happiness in life. Despite her inner turmoil, she had a strong belief in God, and also hopes that she would find her estranged sister, Nettie who loved her with all her heart. She got pregnant at an early age by the man she thought was her father. Celie was also a young bride who was being abused by her husband.
Sometimes life brings experiences of abandonment through difficult times. Celie shows an expression of abandonment from God with her intimate friend Shug Avery, who challenges Celie where she thinks God is. “What God do for me?...He gave me a lynched daddy, crazy mama, a lowdown dog of a step pa and a sister I probably won’t see again...The God I been praying and writing to is a man. And act just like all the other mens I know. Trifling, forgetful and lowdown...Miss Celie, You better hush. God might hear you. Let’im hear me, I say. If he ever listened to poor colored women the world would be a different place” Celie said in anger (192). It is times like this that society tells the world to push life’s disasters under the rug. When instead it requires the attention of others to become endured. To be human is to go through the struggles of life and face them. Without them, life can become meaningless. Celie experiences this through oppression and her loss of faith in God. Throughout
As a result of these tragic events, Celie writes to an unknown audience, resembling her unknown identity. In the beginning, the only person she can talk to is God. She writes her first letters to God shortly after her so-called father raped her. Each one of the letters is short, choppy and has a similar rhythm. The patterns found in her letters symbolize her state of mind; she feels depressed and weak. "Celie does not think of her letters as anything else than just that, as written documents saying the things she wishes to tell the recipients she cannot speak to in person”, making God the person she has always wished to communicate with (Boynukara). Her letters in the beginning are also mostly written to God and not signed off, illustrating her lack of identity. Her conception of God is a “Big and old and tall and graybearded and white. He wear white robes and go barefooted” (Walker 195). Celie’s first letter proves that she has a low self-confidence when she writes, "Dear God, I am fourteen years old. I am I have always been a good girl. Maybe you can give me a sign letting me know what is happening to me." (1). According to Janoff Bulman, “cognitive strategy used to make
Alice Walker’s novel, The Color Purple, is a rhapsody of joy and triumph: the triumph of one woman’s crusade against racism, sexism and socially imposed traditions. Written in the epistolary form in an incandescently clear and impassioned language, heated with love and rage, it tells the story of Celie, a battered Black woman, who along with a few other Black women stand together to finally emerge triumphant over a world which marginalizes them. Steven Spielberg has immortalized the novel by making it into a motion picture of the same title. This novel portrays the devastating effects of social and racial oppression and the adverse effects it had on the victims. In almost all her works, Walker deals with the suppression of women in family and society. With her African-American ethos, she views the problem of gender politics as cultural stereotypes that make women social, physical and emotional victims of male hegemony.
The second chapter will bring out Womanistic elements from Alice Walker’s well acclaimed novel The Color Purple which is a touching novel and tells the story of Celie, a black woman who always lived a submissive life and was tangled into a series of mental and physical humiliations and never thought of hatching out to a new world where she could breathe in the air of liberation and equality. Alice Walker has presented issues of racism and sexism in all her works. History has witnessed the self empowerment of black women by fighting against all those who have tried to silence their voices.
Celie was a young girl when she was forcefully abused, used, and married. This young lady was a daughter and a sister to someone that lived a similar life to the one she lived all throughout. Celie was always put down, and used by everyone she met. She never felt the pleasure and happiness to be with any men. For, her all men were the same they always thought they were superior ,and wanted everything their way. The only thing that would keep celie from doing something she would regret were the letters she first wrote to God. In these letters celie is asking for God to show up in her life ,and just fix every broken part that had occurred. She experienced a tough living ,and it felt like everything just kept falling apart. Walker first starts Celie’s letters just by portraying