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Everyday Use By Toni Morrison Analysis

Decent Essays

“Racitatif” by Toni Morrison and “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker, both tackle the subject of race on a microscopic level in the hopes of magnifying the social injustices that tore the united states apart. “Everyday use,” Tackles the subject of race, from the vantage point of a single family and the generations that lay between the mother and daughter. Morrison, in a unique manner, tells the story of two girls, Twyla and Roberta, and their ability to communicate with each other during such racially motivated times; all the while, leaving the reader in the dark about the race of the two girls.

In “Racitatif,” when the two girls first meet, right off the bat Roberta, realizing that Twyla is of a different race and recalls what her mother once told her about that race, “They never washed their hair and they smelled funny” (Morrison 1). Yet, almost immediately a friendship erupts from their mutual hatred of the older girls at the shelter. One of their first interactions with each other illustrates their chemistry perfectly, Twyla illustrates a conversation they had by saying, “‘Oh,’ she nodded her head and I liked the way she understood things so fast. So for the moment it didn't matter that we looked like salt and pepper standing there and that's what the other …show more content…

from and he mother, while daydreaming, envisions her meeting her daughter on somewhat of a talk show, describing it as, “There I meet a smiling, gray, sporty man like Johnny Carson who shakes my hand and tells me what a fine girl I have” (Walker 2). Because their relationship is so far apart, mama has to resort to an elaborate fantasy like this for her and her sister to get along once again. Continuously throughout this story, one sees the constant strife of old versus new and the fight between rural and southern African American

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