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Everyday Use by Alice Walker an Analysis

Decent Essays

Tamica Powell
September 30, 2011

Everyday Use Analysis

Everyday Use is a compelling story of a mother's conflicting relationships with her two daughters. Maggie, which the mother feels contains more practical and traditional ways of living life and then Dee her oldest and most promising daughter, who she feels has broken away from tradition and has lost a lot of their heritage. At first glance you would see this as the normal mother daughter spat of maybe the wild child versus the little miss do right. This story holds a much deeper and important meaning. Everyday use tells the struggle to keep hold of African American culture in the late 1960’s early 1970’s, when most African Americans were searching for their roots. Many …show more content…

Dee even had to ask “Didn’t Uncle Buddy whittle it out of a tree you all used to have”? She did not know herself, and when her boyfriend (or husband) asked who also made the dasher. She couldn’t reply, instead Maggie did stating “Aunt Dee’s first husband whittled the dash”, and that “His name was Henry, but they called him Stash. This is an inherent meaning that with the transformation to the Black Panther movement our heritage was being forgotten.
The quilts in this story represent African American heritage, they symbolize the pain, tears and struggle African Americans had to go through in the United States. The sister’s conflict over who should have the quilts shows the struggle between the Black Power movement and the African American, and who should define its heritage. Dee when asked what she would do with the quilts, she stated “Hang them”. Dee also vagrantly argued that her sister Maggie would use put the quilts to “everyday use”. See Dee’s argument represents the Black Power movement by using the quilts to hang as a status symbol, to remind her of the social and economic status she has currently obtained. Maggie’s use symbolizes the African American culture to purely remember the heritage not to rank with statuses or to compare. Alice Walker distinctively allows us to know which argument she feels is

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