The Color Purple Synthesis Essay

1662 Words4 Pages

Alice Walker’s The Color Purple presents a fractured society in which African-American women are subjected to the discrimination from, predominantly but not exclusively, white and black men. Our protagonist, Celie, is reduced to domestic slavery from the tender age of fourteen, enforced by violence, psychological and sexual abuse. The opening line of the novel, the only one which breaks the epistolary form, ‘You better not never tell nobody but god’ induces a psychological strain on Celie, isolating her from her family resorting to addressing her narrative, pathos letters, to God. This line refers to the shockingly graphic incestuous rape by Celie’s ‘Pa’, a degrading torment that, twinned with the stress of secrecy, confines Celie to isolate herself even from her own body - it is not until the emergence of ‘Shug Avery’, that Celie discovers pleasure in her own skin. …show more content…

‘A Clockwork Orange’ used Anthony Burgess’ creation of Nadsat, a Russian-influenced language used by the teenagers within the novel. Initially, the exposure of the reader to a new language isolates the reader from the action. This, by default, not only distances the reader from the horrific nature of events, but also provides a lack of clarity on developments, disallowing the reader to conclude a moral judgement about Alex. The ambiguity of events makes for a frustrating lack of understanding, but may also provide a form of blessing as the graphic nature of violence is diminished by a language barrier. Structurally, this may also be Anthony Burgess’ way of developing sympathy for a teenager subject to the regime – it is only past Alex’s brutality that Nadsat becomes more comprehensible, leaving only the second half of the novel where Alex faces the Ludovico technique and is used by political activists, that a reader can fully understand the adversity and lack of freedom that Alex truly

Open Document