1. The biggest choice Celie made was to move to Tennessee for a period of time. This turned out well because she became more confident about herself. She built a pants making company and stopped relying on her friends. Although she did not realize that she was not moving until Shug announced that “Us leaving… Celie is coming to Memphis with me” (199), Celie was grateful for leaving her husband and the toxicity of the environment. She learned to fend for herself and reflected on her past. By having free time to come to terms with all the experiences she had, Celie understood that they helped her build character and influenced her decision to stand up for herself. 2. I was surprised when Celie denounced God and her religion for part of the novel. I felt like she would have been angry, but still continued to write to him. Because religion is a large part of the South and is ingrained into her, I assumed that she would forgive him more. When she wrote, “I don’t write to God no more… [God] act just like all the other mens I know. Trifling, forgitful, and lowdown” (192), I was torn between pitying her and applauding her. I pity her because she had too many bad experiences with men; on the other hand, I applaud her because she started to question everything and became less dependent on people, and in this …show more content…
One skill a reader can gain from reading this novel is understanding how the themes connect with each other through the use of comparisons. Rather than make each topic a separate issue, the book links them together to show that not everything is a black and white issue, but rather one that is full of grey areas. Similar to untangling 5 pieces of string, trying to solve one of Celie’s problems cannot work without figuring out how it affects her other ones. Although I understood that the novel’s themes are hard to analyze and find a solution to, creating a simile to connect the main idea helped me comprehend the hardships that Celie had to overcome to become
Celie is mostly uneducated until her sister helps her learn how to read and write so she can write her letters when she is absent as she suspects she will need to send her away from Albert. This displays Celie’s will to improve herself even through the harsh times she goes through and is able to keep her composure. Celie protects her sister Nettie from the fate she had and allows for Nettie to have a better life compared to hers. Celie in the novel evolves into a character that is strong, caring, and the ability to
Over the course of the novel, Celie, became a confident, independent, strong woman. The novel begins with fourteen year old, Celie, who had been repeatedly raped by her father and bore two of his children as a result. Celie is scared into silence about her mistreatment and prays to God to, “give me a sign letting me know what is happening to me” (1). As the novel progresses, Celie, is sold into marriage to Mr. ______, who continues to abuse Celie physically and emotionally. Celie continues to remain passive to the abuse and writes, “all I can do not cry.
Celie: Celie starts out as a scared young kid, who is abused and raped by her stepfather. She does whatever anyone tells her and barely ever speaks up for what is right. In the beginning she feels so alone and thinks it's better not to stand out for it will only hurt her. When Mr. ______ begins to act violent towards her, she still acts in a passive manner. Celie gets more and more afraid until she meets Shug. Shug is a female friend whom is much stronger than her. She learns more about a sexual relationship, and how to be her own person. Celie learns to fight back and reinvent herself. Celie changes her perspective on religion to. God may not be the person she always thought he was. The letters from Nettie also change Celie, in fact now she knows she has family. She gains self worth in the fact that her kids, and sister are fine. In the very end of the book Celie becomes a new person, working and sewing as a job. She doesn't rely on men nor does she feel worthless.
Its is not until Celie leaves behind her male tormentors and has strong female influences that she starts to develop a true sense of who she is. Celie’s dramatic character shift in this novel is brought on by
She learns that a person does not have to be extraordinary to be loved, in fact people can be very ordinary, like herself, and deserve to be loved just the same. During this time in the novel Celie also finds the courage to stand up to Mr.___ and leave him. This action takes a great deal of self-respect because here for the first time the reader sees that Celie knows she deserves better than Mr.___. Celie is set over the edge when it is discover that Mr.___ has been deliberately separating Celie from her sister Nettie for many years. When Celie finds all Nettie’s letters Mr.___ has been hiding it set her into a spiraling rage that Shug calm her down from. Celie tells Mr.___, “Until you do right by me, everything you touch will crumble” (intext). The only way Celie can cope without killing Mr.___ is by making pants. The pants of course were Shug’s idea and Shug funds Celie so she can make as many pants as her heart desires. Later in the novel Celie has moved out of Mr.___’s house and made so many pants that she is something of a master. She opens her own store to sell her popular pants and finally is self sufficient. At this time Celie also was able to mend old bridges. When Shug left her for a younger man Celie found good company in Mr.___. Celie also was able to fully love Shug and do what was best for her even if it hurt Celie. (quote about loving shug) With all
Walker`s diction throughout the book emphasizes the inexperience of a young girl that is illiterate and existing in a land where men are considered dominate forces of every demeanor of life. Celie cultured how she was to submit to man, men in general which caused Celie to inhibit all of her own hopes and dreams. The moment Shug Avery and Sofia are introduced in the text we began to see the indoctrinated woman Celie really is within herself. Shug Avery is the perfect epitome of what it means to be an independent woman that Celie desires to be but cannot find the inner courage to become. Celie learned to stand up for herself and emerged as a powerful and astute woman through Shug`s yearning and inspiration. Celie encountered a lot of violence that was very uncomfortable and intolerable for her. Many of
Celie is able to accept her past and establish a clear vision of herself and fulfillment through the acts of love. She meets other women who tell her that she should stand up for herself and fight, but Celie feels that it’s better to survive than to fight and risk not surviving. However, there are certain triggers that lead Celie to stand up. Like a true fighter, Celie proves herself to be willing to stand up for the people she loves. Even as a downtrodden victim of her Pa, Celie sacrifices herself and offers herself to her father so that he keeps his hands off of Nettie. As mentioned in this quote, where Pa is sexually abiding Celie, “First he put his thing up gainst my hip and sort of wiggle it around. Then he grab hold my titties. Then he push his thing inside my pussy. When that hurt, I cry. He start to choke me, saying You better shut up and git used to it. ” (Walker, 4). Celie has the potential by putting her efforts into other people, but not realizing she is able to stand up for herself the same ways he does for Nettie. Relating it back to the novel, “Beloved”, Sethe does the same representation when she is trying to save Beloved even though the idea is bizarre of her killing her own child, but she only does it so that she would not have to suffer the way Sethe did. Celie is introduced with Shug Avery a blues singer, who she was first found “rude”, but as the story moves along, Shug Avery becomes the reason Celie learns to love herself. Because Celie is finally opening herself up by loving someone, Celie becomes more lovable. Through Shug’s love, Celie begins to realize her own self-worth, from the minute when Shug Avery wrote a song for Celie, as said in this quote: “This song I'm bout to sing us call Miss. Celie's song.”(Walker, 73).By the end of the novel, Celie loves more
Celie was born into an underprivileged family of African American farmers in the early twentieth century. Celie’s story is parallel to the post civil war era of the United States, educating the reader of the African Americans’ low position in society. Even though blacks were free from slavery, prejudiced Jim Crow Laws controlled them. When the characters were in public, they were forced
Pa told her to only refer to God, Celie only expresses herself to God, bringing the next themein the novel which is creative expression. When Celie is told to keep quiet and not say a word toanyone, Celie figures out a way to express herself by letters referring to God. The third theme thatis presented in the novel is sexual abuse. Celie’s Pa began to abuse her when her mammy did notwant to have a sexual relationship with him because she had just given birth.
The deeper meaning of this book is to never give up because even when she got set back, Celie still escaped. For example, her father would call her ugly and say that she would never become anything in life but later on she worked hard and
Celie practically struggled for happiness her whole existence. Her father sold her to a man who had no intent of loving or caring for her. Celies’ husband whom she refers to as Mr. physically and verbally abused her. Mr. felt that the only way to keep a woman in check was to beat her and he did just that throughout the movie. Like any woman would though the abuse Celie lost herself and respect for herself. Living with Mr. was a life full of darkness and hatred. Life with her husband was no better life than life with her stepfather. It took years for Celie to become brave enough to fight back for what she accept as true and gain understanding of how to convey amusement and have little outlook on life. After years of abuse, Celie no longer was afraid of Mr. She no longer cared for her husband or the
Not even the theme or main idea was as enthralling as the vernacular used by Celie, the main character. The concept of the way this book was written is extremely complex. Through a series of letters to God and her sister, Nettie, Celie tells her life’s story in excruciating detail that describes the problems of society through the eyes of the simplicity of her nature (“Some Letters...”). Celie is extremely uneducated. Without friends or a stable family, it was hard for her to grasp the concept of intellectualism.
In the beginning of the novel Celie is living with her abusive “Pa”. At a young age Celie is raped and has two children. She is beat if she doesn’t do something exactly how her Pa wants. Then one day Celie is married off to Mr. (Albert) who also treats her like a slave.
But Celie gains confidence and succeeds through the opportunities she takes advantage of, and she learns to love and be loved. Celie has had a tough life. From being abuse by her own father to having a kid and getting it sold. Celie has always been abuse by her step Father, calling her ugly, fat, dumb, etc. Eventually the situation gets worse yet better as she grows up.
Walker introduces the reader to the protagonist, Celie, through a series of letters. In these letters the reader finds Celie amidst her mother’s death. The author chooses to address her letters to God, giving Celie a greater willpower to survive. Celie’s upbringing gave her maternal authority; as seen through the multiple maternal roles she played through the novel. Her mother’s death forces her to step up and fill a, painful role revealing her inner strength and ability to remain optimistic.The full