As a child I was often overlooked by my father. I am the youngest of one sibling and the only girl on my father’s side of the family. Growing up I was an average, girl getting average grades and living an average life. Getting average grades just wasn’t acceptable in my house especially since my father is a teacher. Being “average Rachelle” resulted in me being overlooked which led to my brother being in the spotlight constantly. My brother wasn’t so average. He got good grades, scored high on state test and even got presidential awards for all of his academic achievements. Everyone praised my brother throughout his grade school years and they still do it now while he’s in college. You ever heard the term “the ugly duckling”? Well that was …show more content…
What’s the purpose of savoring something or trying to make it last? You can be here today and gone tomorrow and that bottle of perfume will remain full because you savored it instead of enjoying it. In conclusion Maggie and Dee are sisters that turned out to be the complete opposite even though they were raised by the same mother and lived in the same household. They weren’t the average sisters you seen on television. Maggie is shy and passive while Dee is confident and determined. Maggie is complacent with the life she’s living and wouldn’t change it for anything in the world. Dee is trying to be someone she’s not and wants to live the rich and the famous lifestyle. Maggie is unattractive on the outside but has a beautiful soul on the inside while Dee is the opposite, Beautiful on the outside but scarred on the inside. Maggie values the quilts her grandma and aunt made and wants to put them to use, but Maggie just wants to hang them up for display to show her heritage that she’s so ashamed of. In the end it was Maggie that is beautiful and courageous while Dee was the weak one. Maggie didn’t have to change who she was so she can feel a little selfness despite the
Maggie is described as being unattractive, very shy and self-conscious about the way she looked. Maggie always looked down at herself and thought she could not compare to her sister. She thinks her sister lives a life that she missed on, by getting an education and having the finer things in life. The scars she has on her body from the house fire done more than just scare her skin but has scared her soul too. Maggie, mother talks about her daughter in a way a person would think no mother should ever do.“ Have you ever
Alice Walker juxtaposes Maggie with her sister, Dee, to demonstrate how society denigrates not only African-American women but women in general in the 1970s. Early on in the story, Maggie is described as nervous, hopelessly standing in the corner. Later she is described as nearly hidden from view. On a metaphorical level, Maggie is the symbol of the lack of power women held in the 1970s. She is the epitome of the silent female homemaker. On the other hand, Dee is assertive, “will look you right in the eye.” She serves as a symbol of the free, successful modern woman. However, her assertiveness might come off as cockiness, and too much pride. By contrasting Maggie and Dee, Alice Walker is expressing both sides of the female role during that time.
The two sister both have a strong love for their mother. The story gives no name of their mother, but to create a picture the book states, “In real life I am a large, big-boned women with rough, man-working hands” (78). Dee and Maggie are now grown up, but they have not forgot about their mother. Maggie continues to stay at home with her mother throughout the story, until she marries her soon to be husband John Thomas. John Thomas the soon to be husband has mossy teeth in an earnest face. “My own words” (79) Maggie stayed home and help her mother do things around the house. On the other hand, Dee went off to college, but as soon as she completed her education she came home to visit her mother and sister. Their mother was someone that work hard,
Maggie and Dee are extremely different people, but they share some qualities like all sisters do. One similar trait is they are both from the same family and experienced some similar events in childhood. Both children had to experience the fire that burnt down their old house (49). Another example of their similarities is that they are both in a relationship with a man. Dee is with the person that may or may not be her husband Hakim-a-Barber and Maggie has the man she is courting, John Thomas. They both are going through the ups and downs of a relationship. Lastly, they both want the quilts that Mama has. Dee wants to take them back to
She shows that you can value things like the quilts in different ways. Maggie and Dee are very different characters. Each one has characteristics in areas that the other doesn’t. The two sisters did not share a bond throughout any part of their life. In fact they did not even say anything to each other until Dee was leaving. There is a constant communication barrier that is put in front of the two of them. Dee intimidates Maggie with her fierce ways of getting her point across. Maggie being the shyer of the two does not have a whole lot to say in order to defend her. She depends on her mom to fight her battles. Throughout this whole piece, Walker uses contrasting characters to highlight
One could believe that this emotional poverty in both stories stemmed from both their settings and heritage alike. In Walker’s “Everyday Use” there is a sort of reunion; however, this reunion was not one that was “…not a mutually pleasant occasion for family members” (Piacentino 171). Dee had not been happy about with her mother and believed she was deprived from who she really should have been because of her mother. This caused to experience heavy emotional strains from all ends of the table. Alike this same scenario occurred with Maggie just in a different context. From Maggie’s point of view as told from the story she had admired her sister. This is because Maggie is described as being “chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle, ever since the fire that burned the other house to the ground” (Walker 487). While Dee was the beautiful one with the superficial understanding and the bad attitude. Ed Piacentino, author of "Reconciliation with Family in Alice Walker's Kindred Spirits”, stated that this coming home of Dee was a “cross-cultural confrontation” (Piacentino 171) focused on the uneventful return of Dee. In reference to the struggle of familial relationships due to emotional poverty as conveyed by Walker’s “Everyday Use” Dee was a “superior-minded child looking down on her mother’s simplicity, and in effect, the simplicity
She lacks all the qualities her sister has. She’s not bold, and she walks with her head down on the floor, showing she has no self-confidence. She has scars all over her body, from the time the house burned down. She’s more of a quiet person who would stand in the corner and not talk to you. You can tell she’s always been kind of jealous of her sister, but I guess also a bit proud of her, and despite everything she does love her. If she didn’t, she would have never raised money with her mom and the church for her sister to go away to college. She also always looks at her sister with a mixture of envy and awe. She’s used to getting everything she wants and loves taken away from her, right in front of her eyes. When Dee finds these quilts that Maggie is supposed to have once she gets married, she’s in the kitchen. When she hears her mom and sister talking about the quilts, she comes out of the kitchen and tells her mom "She can have them mama", and she says it as if she’s used to never wining anything "I can remember Grandma Dee without the quilts." And she smiles, but you can tell it’s not a smile of happiness; it’s more of a forced smile she is used to giving
Pride is the theme that seems to separate this family the most. It's having pride versus not having it. Maggie doesn't have it. She does not speak for herself when Dee wants the quilts. She lets mama speak for her. Like a scalded dog, she hides behind Mama when Dee arrives. Mama compares Maggie to a "Lame animal…run over by a car…"(Walker 88). Pride mostly comes from respect and she doesn't get much. Dee maybe has too much pride. This probably comes from "the world not knowing how to say no to her." She has looks and she's what one would describe as
Maggie is the younger sister of the two. Parallel to Mama, Maggie also suffer from insecurities. Dee is lighter than Maggie with nicer hair and a fuller figure. Maggie was burned in the house fire and she shuffles when she walks. She is described as being shy, unable to make eye contact, and does not like to be seen when other people are around. The story tells how “she stand hopelessly in the corners, homely and ashamed of the burn scars down her arm and legs, eyeing her sister with a mixture of envy and awe” (p.315). Maggie’s thought of her sister is that she has always held life in the palm of one hand, that’s “no” is a word the world never learned to
The way the burning house, her stuck-up sister, and society influenced Maggie make her unique in relation to others. Maggie was so damaged from her home burning down that she turned into a meek and undervalued young lady. Maggie is so unsure that her mother says she walks like a dog run over by a car: “chin on chest eyes on ground, feet in shuffle, ever since the fire that burned the other house on the ground.” This demonstrates that Maggie absence of self-confidence make her frightened to look. She imagines that on the off chance that she can’t see the individuals around her, then they can’t see her. What’s more, Maggie’s discernible scars have impacted on the way she conducts herself. As indicated by Mama, when she was pulling Maggie out of the fire, her arms were adhering, “her hair was smoking, and her dress was tumbling off her in minimal dark papery pieces.” This is huge light of the fact that indicates how much the flame really physically scarred her. This additionally clarifies why she is so apprehensive about individuals seeing her. Maggie’s apparent compressed version of confirmation in herself is created basically by the fire. The barbaric way Maggie’s sister, Dee, presents herself awful impact on Maggie’s certainly. At this point when Dee inquired as to whether she can have some unique quilts and Mama says no on the grounds that she
The novel, Maggie: A Girl Of The Streets, by Stephen Crane, takes place in the slums of New York City during the 1890’s. It is about a girl, Maggie Johnson, who is forced to grow up in a tenement house. She had a brother, Jimmie, an abusive mother, Mary, and a father who died when Maggie was young. When Maggie grew up, she met her boyfriend, Pete. In Maggie’s eyes, Pete was a sophisticated young man who impressed Maggie because he treated her better than she had been treated to all of her life. Once Maggie’s mother and brother found out that Maggie was sleeping with this man, Mary threw Maggie out into the streets, condemning her to a life of evil. Eventually, Pete decided he no longer wished to see Maggie.
While the two sisters perspectives on heritage contrast each other, Walker employs a case of dramatic irony to prove that Dee's perspective is wrong, which automatically proves that Maggie is right, considering their opposite characteristics. Dee
Maggie, the youngest daughter, saw herself as a shy, introverted youthful woman. She had scars mentally and physically from when their house had burned down some years before, and she is very ashamed of them. Once Dee and her
While Maggie was a very shy person who loved her mother and liked their way of living and didn't wanted to travel away like Dee did. Mama was an uneducated woman but was confident about herself and liked her way of living and she looked about herself as a hero that she was very poor but she was able to well educate her children and to make them not to be like her and she was tough person who worked anything to get money for her children just to make them better than her and well
Maggie and Dee have completely different physical appearances than each other. Maggie has a thin body figure, and her arms and legs are scarred from the house fire. Maggie is jealous of Dee’s beauty, and she seems to be ashamed of the way she looks. Mama says, “Maggie will be nervous until after her sister goes: she will stand hopelessly in corners, homely and ashamed of the burn scars down her arms and legs, eyeing her