Literary Analysis of The Color Purple

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The Color Purple is an epistolary novel written by Alice Walker. This novel displays the growth and development of an average African-American woman. This novel demonstrates the everyday hardships that were placed on blacks, and how they battled to overcome them. It is a very controversial novel, and touches on a variety of sensitive topics, from spousal abuse, incest, to even lesbianism.
Alice Walker vividly explains the difficult, yet realistic, life of blacks in their communities. She writes of how the black men, who at this point in time are inferior to the white men, use their wives to provide them with feeling of importance. Women, in this period of time, were viewed as workers, housekeepers, and objects. “Celie’s object status is evident in the beginning when she is given to Albert [Mr.___] in the place of Nettie [Celie’s sister] … she is also a substitute for Albert’s true love Shug” (Tucker 84). In The Color Purple the relationship between Celie and Mr. ___ undergoes many changes. Throughout the novel, you begin to visualize the unpleasant relationship they have and you start to see how this will ultimately transform Celie into the strong individual she really is.
There are several events that contribute to the transition of Celie. “From the beginning of the novel there is an element of fantasy in the book.
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Celie becomes the ugly duckling, who will eventually be redeemed through suffering” (Harris 159). After being separated from her sister, Celie begins to realize that there is no one else there for her, but God. Walker captures this this sense of abandonment by using epistolary to tell of Celie’s conversations with God through letters. Celie at this point in the story could be described as imageless. Wit...

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...ldren who were taken from her at the time of their births. Celie also becomes aware that her father, who indeed was her stepfather, left her a house. Celie finally leaves Mr.___ to reunite with her sister and her children, whom she had never met. After their remarkable journeys in life, Celie and Nettie finally reunite and live a happy and satisfactory life together with their family.
Having won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1983, and also the National Book Award for Fiction, Alice Walker will forever be noted in history for breaking the literary barrier in African American literature. She not only conveyed the importance of blacks, but also distinguished the necessity of African American women in America. “ No one has ever written a novel which so unequivocally posits that the lives and freedom of black women are of crucial importance and concern (insert 111)

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