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Direct Characterization In The Flowers By Alice Walker

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Alice Walker, the author of the short story “The Flowers”, uses direct characterization to imply major details about the man by the describing his condition. Myop had found a man who appeared to have been lynched. She studied the man and took into account everything she saw, “He had been a tall man… He’d had large white teeth” (Walker 7). The repeated use of the word “had” clearly shows what he was like when he was alive. She isn’t directly saying he is dead, but she is giving us hints towards it. Myop, being the curious girl she is, noticed that, “His head lay beside him” (Walker 7). She uses the word “lay” which implies his head is separate from the rest of this body. Again, Walker is using little artistic hints to imply the man is dead without

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