Conflict In Alice Walker's The Flowers

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The main conflict in “The Flowers” is the clash between ignorance and experience. At the beginning of the story, Myop is portrayed as a naïve and innocent child who was unaware of racial discrimination. Her ignorance was demonstrated when she went outdoors from her house to the smokehouse, singing: “She was ten, and nothing existed for her but her song…and the tat-de-ta-ta-ta of accompaniment.” (Walker) This childish behaviour of Myop’s forced her to close her eyes from viewing the previous reality of her race. However, after she had noticed the lynched man on her way home, her innocence dissipated and she began to realize the agony and tortures that African-Americans underwent in the past. Myop’s transformation in personality was displayed

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