The Color Purple

1810 Words4 Pages

The novel of “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker discusses an illegible black girl named Celie experiences gender discrimination in the Southern United States. Her youth and early adulthood begin with, her struggle to resist her free wills against the male dominated world. She also gets physical and sexual abuses from her stepfather and her husband. Because Celie receives mistreatment and sexual harassment from the two most important men in her life, she is completely passive about her life and her identity as a woman. Social norms expect women to be treated beneath men; thus, the abusive patriarchal power prevents her from achieving her womanhood. Celie becomes a sex slave and a servant throughout the novel without basic human rights. At the …show more content…

As a result, she decides to remain silent and let men take control of her. Celie loses maternal love and becomes a homeless person when her mother dies. Barkers mentions, “Celie is denied a sense of self because she lacks a sense of belonging. Her mother was too much a product of an oppressive environment to provide the kind of nurturing that could mother the mind of anyone. She was not a caretaker; she was a victim. She chose death over a life of continued misery and disappointment, fearing that admitting the truth would force her to fight back” (56). Celie’s mother needs to take a risk and stand up for her daughter’s safety, instead of giving up her role as a mother. Being a mother is about to overcome the fear of anything and persist the goal to provide the best environment for her daughter. Celie’s mother becomes the result of the powerless mother against her husband when she is not a good protector. In fact, Celie’s mother is not given enough love to her daughter because she kills herself quitting over an obstacle. If Celie’s mother chooses to live her life, then she would have to fight her husband for oppression at some points. Perhaps, a bigger humiliation receives from her husband if she does not grant the freedom that she wants. A victim of death allows Celie’s mother to stop fighting her rights from her husband. Her death also erases memories from her past, and pretend that nothing is wrong within the male dominated world. Hence, Celie’s mother accepts the notion of male dominated society when she gives away her life to her husband. Because of this, Celie also embraces the idea from her mother's perspective that men should be above women. Celie surrenders herself to two men who treat her like a second class citizen, this explains her low self-esteem. Ultimately, attaining the courage to speak Celie’s thought helps her to learn

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