“The Flowers” In the short story “The Flowers”, the author Alice Walker portrays an innocent African American girl whose childhood gets suddenly destroyed. Myop is at first the innocent and happy girl which she ever was, but then she stumbles upon the body of an Afro American man who was punished and died of being a slave and of his skin color/ After she finds the man, her summer was over, this not only leads us to think that the season is changing, it also shows that this discovery shows the end of her carefree days as an innocent little girl. Myop is a ten year old girl living back in the old days, where slaves are still there. She has a great time, while skipping around and thinking, “That the days had never been as beautiful as these”. …show more content…
Her childhood has been a healthy and happy one; she always takes walks with her mother to find nuts and plays with the chickens in the hen house. She likes to play imaginary instruments and to make up her own music, because “she was ten and nothing existed for her but her song.” Kluge 2 Today “she made her own path, bouncing this way and that, vaguely keeping an eye out for snakes”, this shows us that her decision is made by an child and that her decisions are mostly not wise. She also finds the first time “strange blue flowers with velvety ridges”, this was is like never before. After miles she sees “the strangeness of the land”, which “made it not as pleasant as her usual haunts”, because she never had walked this way before. You can find one foreshadowing in her description in her surrounding, it is gloomy and “the air was damp, the silence close and deep”, like if something will happen to her. After this feeling she wanted to go home “to the peacefulness of the morning”, but then “she stepped smack into his eyes”. She sees a tall Afro American man with large white teeth’s, but all are cracked or broken, like after a fight. His clothe shad rotted away except some threads of blue denim from his overalls, like he would have been there a long
The Flowers By Alice Walker Written in the 1970's The Flowers is set in the deep south of America and is about Myop, a small 10-year old African American girl who explores the grounds in which she lives. Walker explores how Myop reacts in different situations. She writes from a third person perspective of Myop's exploration. In the first two paragraph Walker clearly emphasises Myop's purity and young innocence.
“Once upon a time there was a wife and mother one too many times” (Godwin 39). This short story begins with the famous opening, once upon a time, which foreshadows that the story line will be similar to a fairy tale. It raises expectations for the story that all will be magical and end happily. A typical modern-day fairy tale is that of a distressed character who overcomes an obstacle, falls in love with prince charming, and they ride off into the sunset; living happily ever after never to be heard from again. Godwin however, puts an unexpected twist on “A Sorrowful Woman”. This short story is a tale about what can happen when everyday roles take over our identity. Ultimately, this short story challenges societal expectations of marriage
Lorna Dee Cervantes' poem, “Poema para los Californios Muertos” (“Poem for the Dead Californios”), is a commentary on what happened to the original inhabitants of California when California was still Mexico, and an address to the speaker's dead ancestors. Utilizing a unique dynamic, consistently alternating between Spanish and English, Cervantes accurately represents the fear, hatred, and humility experienced by the “Californios” through rhythm, arrangement, tone, and most importantly, through use of language.
During the story the author often uses foreshadowing to give hints to the reader of things that will happen in the future. When the story starts, a storm is coming on a late October night. The storm symbolizes the evil approaching the town. Usually it seems a storm would resemble something dark and evil, because a stormy night is always a classic setting for something evil. At the
I know that knock knock illustrates what Tupac’s poem was trying to represent. I think knock knock is and example of what a rose growing in concrete looks like, Daniel Beatty to me is the “rose” and the “concrete” is the situation the poem describes , that its that his father is in jail and he never again heard a word from him. Nevertheless Daniel manages to surpass his “concrete”, I think he got tired of waiting for a response so he made himself some answers and by doing that he turned himself into this very talented individual that spreads powerful messages in the form of poems.
“The Flowers” by Alice Walker is a short story written in the 1970’s. The story focuses on Myop, a ten year old African American girl who loves to explore the land in which she lives. Carefree and naïve, Myop decides to travel further away from her ‘Sharecropper cabin’ and travels deep inside the woods to unfamiliar land where she discovers the decomposed body of an African American man. It is then Myop quickly grows up and suddenly becomes aware of the world in which she lives. The story relies on setting and symbolism to convey the theme of departing innocence.
The setting of Alice Walkers short story” The Flowers” is important for us, the readers to obtain a perspective of how life was like growing up for a 10 year old African American girl by the name of Myop. The title of the story is “The Flowers.” When you think about flowers, you instantly compare them to being beautiful, pure, and innocent. The title of the “The Flowers” is a symbolism that correlates to Myop who is the protagonist of the story. Myop is just like a flower in the beginning of the story. She’s a pure and innocent child but that pure innocence changes when she discovers something that’ll change her life forever.
Alice Walker “The Flowers” is a literary piece in which violence is not presented but suggested , and not experienced, but witnessed. Alice Walker is a contemporary African-American writer who is mainly concerned with racism. She has worked to address problems of poverty and inequality. Originally written in 1970, it is set in the south of America and is about Myop a small 10- year old African-American girl who explores the place where she lives with her black family. Alice Walker succeeded in employing symbolism to highlight childhood innocence and the loss of it.
The poem titled Sea Rose by Hilda Doolittle tells about a rose, but not just a rose like any other. The poem instantly begins by going against the common connotation of a rose, the reader is given this passage “Rose, harsh rose,” (line 1). When the thought of a rose comes to mind the last word used to describe the soft petals and beautiful color would be harsh. H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) wants us to think about this rose as not an ordinary or normal rose but to see it as something more or something less. She goes on to say, “marred and with stint of petals” (line 2). To mar something is to disfigure or impair the quality/appearance of something, in this case a rose. Stint means to have an ungenerous amount; by this line we can understand that H.D. has begun to take a rose something commonly associated with beauty and love and twist into a disfigured and battered depiction of what it once was. The rest of the stanza goes on to say, “meagre flower, thin, sparse of leaf,”. A rose is meant to be a strong symbol of love and beauty, yet the depiction of the rose H.D. is giving the reader goes against the preconceived notions of what a rose should be. H.D.’s language and perception of the rose challenges to the reader to think of the rose as something more.
Alice Walker conveys her meaning in a roundabout way, trusting the reader to pick up on it. Through her symbolism, she hits through with a thought-provoking motif of a lost innocence. A very poignant symbol is the noose, which tied together with the mention of sharecropping from before, gives a clearer picture of what is being conveyed here. The noose implies a lynching, something Myop is being made painfully aware of, shocking her out of the childlike daze she managed to still be in after finding a dead person. And after finding this, she lays down her flowers, reminiscent of a grave, the sobriety showing the sudden change passing over Myop.
The main character of the story is Myop, a 10-year-old girl without any major worries in life. The only thing we know about her physical appearance is that she is of African descent because it is mentioned that her hand is dark brown. It is unknown whether she lives in Africa or is a descendant of—or maybe even one of—the African slaves brought to America. Myop has a very childish and
Sharlet Cannon English 1302-56328 Professor T. Heflin August 9th, 2015 The Mother Abortion, a sensitive topic most people don’t want to talk about or try to figure out ways for it to be out-lawed. " The Mother," a poem written by Gwendolyn Brooks looks at abortion from a mothers’ point of view. This poem deals with the heartfelt emotions that a woman may go through after she has had an abortion. The theme, tone and figures of speech written displays overwhelming regret tormenting her mind.
A lot of people down there. Some is dead.” (Morrison 88). This moment that she talks about is starkingly similar to the experience that enslaved people had to endure when they were taken from Africa to America. It also draw attention to Sethe’s immediate african heritage through her mother who was a native African.
Dylan Thomas's poem "Fern Hill" represents the passage of one mans life from boyhood to adulthood and the realization of his mortality. The speaker in this poem uses expressive language and imagery to depict a tale of growing up. The use of colour adds life and character to people and abstract ideas. He looks up to
The essay “In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens” by contemporary American novelist Alice Walker is one that, like a flashbulb, burns an afterimage in my mind. It is an essay primarily written to inform the reader about the history of African American women in America and how their vibrant, creative spirit managed to survive in a dismal world filled with many oppressive hardships. This piece can be read, understood, and manage to conjure up many emotions within the hearts and minds of just about any audience that reads it. However, Walker targets African American women in today’s society in an effort to make them understand their heritage and appreciate what their mothers and