Push

686 Words2 Pages

Sapphire, the author of the well-known book Push, grew up in the United States and taught literature to teenagers and adults in Harlem (Sapphire, II). Having had experience with younger generations of people from different genders, class, and ethnicity, she was able to observe the life issues of her students to a little extent; which probably inspired her to write the novel. Making the protagonist of the story African-American like herself, the author tries to set up the fundamental reality of discrimination of women; illiterate and poor, but more importantly, how these women fight back on their own without male support. Furthermore, we can observe how the feminist approach of the author is a reaction to fantastical myths of ideal feminine lives, such as Cinderella, where the two characters live happily ever after.

Claireece Precious Jones is the extreme opposite of what we may call the white, middle-class, and happy, stereotypical girl. Far from normal, this black, illiterate and poor eighteen year old conceives two children, both from her sexually disturbed father: “1983 and 198...

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