preview

The Color Purple Conformity Essay

Decent Essays

In Alice Walker’s The Color Purple, the protagonist Celie is introduced to adversity with how the contrasts between inwardly questioning the morality and the actions around her, but still has to face the impotency to be forced to the conformed social norms, thus, enlightening the juxtaposed static ideas of Celie’s surroundings and trying to gain her own identity. The setting of this novel is never very clear, but Walker gives the hint at that it is pre-civil rights era with how each character is talked to and how African American people are mentioned in the quotes of the white people in the novel. Celie as a young girl was raped commonly and given away for an arranged married at what we can believe is a young age by her own father. The social aspect of this was not uncommon for African American girls, of Celie’s age. This is important because of how it affected Celie, and her life afterwards, this was the beginning of the contrasts in the outward conformity of her setting and eventually leading up to the inward conformity. In the beginning of the novel, it is very prominent Celie is uneducated and she is just observing what is going around her, not ever giving much input. However, it is seen that as she matures she …show more content…

At this point in the novel, Celie's grammar and vocabulary start to improve; this reflects her life and how she is gaining her own voice and her own sense of observing what is happening around her. This contributes to the theme greatly by how it is a turning point in Celie, has seeing that she has someone in her life besides God that is there for her and a part of her family. This is symbolic towards the fact that she does not have herself to talk to anymore, Nettie will be hearing what she has to say and listen to what is happening to her life, rather than the diary that she wrote to

Get Access