The Color Purple Essay

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    The Color Purple

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    IV ThemIV Theme The Color Purple elicits multitudinous generalizations upon bitter circumstances. The novel possesses a surfeit of themes. One of the major themes in The Color Purple is the sexual relationships between the male and female characters, sexism. Walker stages her story of the transformation of Celie from a female that is passive to one who eventually becomes an independent black woman in the culture of the rural society from the 1920s to the early 1940s. Celie is dominated by her father

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    The Color Purple

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    The title of my book is The Color Purple and it is written by Alice Walker. The book was originally published in 1982, the publisher is Harcourt, And there are 288 pages in the book. There was an adapted version also printed in 1985. Celie the narrator of The Color Purple is a very poor woman who hasn't gone to school. She is a fourteen living in Georgia who starts to write letters to God. Even though she is very young she has been abused and sexually assaulted by her father who does it on a daily

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    The Color Purple

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    The Color Purple is a novel written by Alice Walker. The novel is written in letter format. The main character, Celie, writes to God about her life. The story starts out with 14 year old Celie being raped by her Pa. Her Pa got her pregnant two times. Once her babies were born, Pa took them away. Celie let Pa rape and abuse her to protect her sister Nettie, who was a couple years younger than her. Celie and Nettie were very close and told each other everything. One day, Nettie started dating Mr. __

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    Purple is more than just a colour in Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple”. The colour can be seen to be representative of a number of ideas: it is, “a colour suitable for queens” like Celie says; this means it is happiness; it is illuminating; it is freedom; it is pain and beauty. Because of its symbolism, the colour purple can be seen to have a significant influence on the characters’ growth throughout the novel and, therefore, is an appropriate title for the novel. The colour purple in the novel can

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    The novel, The Color Purple, portrays a story about two sisters who communicate through various letters about their life while they are separated. In the end, they join together through their love and are finally reunited after thirty years. With the morals of race, gender, and life, the rating of this novel is excellent. As an African American woman in the Pre-civil rights time, Celie did not feel welcome or in place during her life in The United States. Women of color in this book were often victims

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    Color Purple Patriarchy

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    After closely analysing the text ‘The Color Purple’, written by Alice Walker, themes such as a woman’s low position within a patriarchal society and a woman’s awareness and perseverance to overcome these inequalities become evident. ‘The Color Purple’ is swift to establish the low position of Celie, an oppressed female, within the patriarchy. Bressler states that “As a social movement, feminist criticism highlights the various ways women in particular have been oppressed, suppressed, and repressed

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    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. Throughout

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    real-life. But the censor’s motto, according to Worthington (1985), is “better to deny than to face” (p. 48). The following is a list of real-life problems discussed in the Color Purple that censors might cite as reasons to censor the book. Are these reasons “better to deny than to face”? Take a position on whether or not The Color Purple should be banned from the high school classroom. Incorporate evidence from the novel for

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    The ancient story of Philomela has resonated in the imaginations of women writers for several thousand years. One particular writer, Alice Walker, revises the myth of Philomela in her novel, The Color Purple, through the protagonist Celie. Similar to the mythic narrative of Philomela, The Color Purple intertwines rape, silencing, and the destruction of feminine subjectivity. Walker alludes and revises the myth of Philomela by allowing Celie to express herself through letters and including the imagery

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    the novel, Mel Watkins, a book editor and writer, also criticizes the choices of Alice Walker and other writers similar to her in his 1986 article “Sex, Racism, and Black Women Writers”. Because Watkins wrote the article a mere four years after The Color Purple’s release, Watkins’ belief that “black women writers who have chosen black men as a target have set themselves outside a tradition that is nearly as old as black American literature itself” is a direct window into the mindset of the people reading

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