Feminism In The Color Purple By Alice Walker

1187 Words3 Pages

Feminism has made a major change in not just women’s lives but in the world. Throughout the world, women have always been considered “second class citizens” yet as the years have passed, proven facts show that women are capable of working just as good as men and even do more duties at the same time. In the early centuries most women weren’t able to get any type of credit without a male cosigner and in certain countries their husbands had complete control not only for their property but for their earnings as well. Men created a false public sentiment by giving to the world a different code of morals for men and women, by which delinquencies which exclude women from society, are not only tolerated, but deemed of little account in man. Women …show more content…

While growing up, many girls could not see their selves beyond the age of twenty one, they had no image of their own future, of themselves as women. Young girls were afraid of growing up and being like their mothers. They were afraid of being a teenage mother and having to stay home all day taking care of the house and their children, as shown in the literary work by Alice Walker. The Color Purple introduces us to the life of a young woman that was given away by her stepfather in order to work in the fields and take care of her new husband’s children. “She ain’t no stranger to hard work. And she clean. And God done fixed her. You can do everything just like you want and she ain’t gonna make you feed it or clothe it” mentioned her stepfather as he gives her away without considering she is a human being and refers to her as a meaningless object. After years of being dominated by men, women felt there was a need for a new identity. A battle for women’s freedom began, to participate in the major work and decisions of society as the equals of men and began to deny their nature as women. An act of rebellion and a violent denial of women identity led the passionate feminist to forge new trails for women. Women had to prove they were humans just like men, they were not a passive, empty mirror, not a useless decoration, nor a mindless animal …show more content…

Feminists had only one model, one image, one vision of a full and free human, man . For until recently, only men had the freedom, the education and the necessary abilities to pioneer, create, discover and to map new trails for future generations. Only men had the freedom to make major decisions that will affect society. Only men had the freedom to love and enjoy love while women were considered animals, less than human, unable to think like men, born merely to breed and serve men. Feminism was not a dirty joke, the feminist revolution had to be fought because women quite simply were stopped at a stage of evolution far short for their human capacity. Some early feminist decided to cut their hair short, were bloomers , and tried to be like men. Feminists wore bloomer dresses in public as a symbol of their emancipation, the rude jokes, from newspaper editors, street corner loafers, and small boys, were unbearable to their feminine sensitivities. “We put the dress on for greater freedom, but what is physical freedom compared to mental bondage” said an abolitionist leading the figure of the early women’s rights movement

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