Everyday Use Literary Analysis

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In the story of Everyday Use, tradition plays a significant role in the characters life. The story not only recognizes tradition but also what it may appear as Ms. Johnson (mom) and Dee is the main conflict in the story. Dee wanted the precious quilts and quickly realizes that she is not getting the quilts, Dee gets furious. Mom promised the quilts to Maggie and for the first time she will not give into Dee. Alice Walker gives the diverse types of rural African American women with the fantasies that make up their humble, poor lives in the south. The example of tradition creating strain is Dee having an education in “Everyday Use". Dee changes her name when she finds animosity with her mother’s tradition of naming the children after relatives. When she tells her mother about her name change, Wangero says, “I couldn’t bear it any longer, being named after the people who oppress me. (3) Dee’s name was used for the connection of family, which is tradition for Ms. Johnson. In consideration of the choice of name her mother thinks back to Big Dee, whom Dee was named after and says, “That’s about as far back as I can trace it. Though in fact, I probably could have carried it back beyond the Civil War through the branches." (3) …show more content…

Telling the story in first person will allow the reader to get an inside view without much judgment on the characters. The “Everyday Use” short story by Alice Walker, the meaning of the story is contained in the title. For Wangero, she yells at her mother and Maggie saying that they don’t understand their “heritage,” and for trying to put the “priceless” quilts to “Everyday Use”. (1) For her mother, Dees’ opinion does not matter because of her setting and prerogative to focus on that which is helpful for everyday use. By the end of the story, the title takes on more consequences as we see that traditions are rooted for their use in each situation and that they can

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