The Value Of Heritage In Everyday Use By Alice Walker

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The story is told by Mama who is describing her two daughters to the audience. One who has gone to college and came changed. This particular daughter is named Dee and changes her behavior and appearance once she returns to visit her mother. The other daughter is named Maggie. Maggie is not educated, but she does keep the traditions taught by her mother. Maggie seems to know how valuable her heritage is in comparison to Dee. Mama has finally opened her eyes to the real world. As Mama grows older she reflections on how she can keep her traditions going once she is gone. The value of heritage is much more important to the mother at this point than anything else. Remember to live your life but never forget or try to change your heritage. Heritage …show more content…

Their home is not big but it is full of traditions and heritage values. There is chickens, pigs, dirt, grass, etc. At the time people there was still systematic racism present. In the short story "Everyday Use," Alice Walker uses various literary elements such as symbolism, conflict, the setting, and tone to demonstrate the value of the characters heritage.
The symbolism in the story is presented through a camera and a quilt which helps demonstrate the appreciation each character has for their heritage. “Then she puts the Polaroid in the back seat of the car, and comes up and kisses me on the forehead" (Walker 488). Dee pulls out the camera and wishes to capture a certain image before she kisses and greets her mother. The camera symbolizes the separation she has …show more content…

In this case the reader discovers through the tone of the story that the Mama knows how much her daughters actually value their heritage. "There I meet a smiling, gray, sporty man like Johnny Carson who shakes my hand and tells me what a fine girl I have. Then we are on the stage and Dee is embracing me with tears in her eyes" (Walker 486). In the beginning, the author expresses enthusiasm through Mama for her daughter Dee. Mama is proud of Dee for attending college. Also Mama hopes that one day her daughter, Dee, will be open and find time to show the world where she comes from. The tone is enthusiastic because Mama is anxious to see her daughter again. The reader can conclude Dee is the first and only one who has attend college. Dee attending college is surprising because of her background heritage. A mother will always understand the value of the heritage because she is the ones who taught the child the learnings. It is the child 's choice as they grow older to both continue and keep the heritage or make their own. Although, Mama has yet to discover that Dee has rearranged her entire heritage. The author changes the tone in this discovering event to defensive. "When I looked at her like that something hit me in the top of my head and ran down to the soles of my feet" (Walker 491). Mama realized the value that Dee had for their heritage. Mama speaks with a defensive voice and actions to show how Maggie

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