Alice Walker The Color Purple Essay

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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. A black strong short story writer, novelist and poet. She focuses her works on the violence directed towards black women, child abuse and rape. She became active in the Civil Rights Movement, fighting for equality for all African Americans. Her experiences informed her first collection of poetry, Once, which was published in 1968. Walker's career as a writer took flight with the publication of her third novel, The Color Purple, in 1982. The novel explores the female African-American experience through the life and struggles of its narrator, Celie. Celie suffers terrible abuse at the hands of her father, and …show more content…

However, Nettie's experience in colonial Africa, rather than being a retreat, further unravels the ties between institutional Christianity and black oppression. Nettie's letters tell of the power of being faced with "the Olinka God" (131), and of physical and cultural destruction. The necessary ignorance of imperialism and the new vision of cross-cultural perspective make Corrine and Samuel appear provincial. Nettie's faithfulness in the face of such inconsistency and violence requires a radical reorientation. The "rules," it seems clear, have changed, and this shift is linked to Nettie's tie to Celie. Nettie does recognize the negative power of the vocation she represents, and distances herself accordingly. The "fact" of her one-way correspondence with Celie seems to speak to a gap in her call. "I would give anything for a picture of you, Celie," writes Nettie. "... the picture of Christ which generally looks good anywhere looks peculiar here" (135). Nettie has had to redefine her purpose. The color purple is basically about a young girl, Cellie, who was a victim of rape by her father. He threatened to kill her mom if she ever told anyone about

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