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Womanism In Alice Walker's The Third Life Of Grange Copeland

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Alice Walker (b1944), one of America’s preeminent black intellectuals. She is an African American poet, novelist, essayist, biographer, short fiction writer, womanist, publisher, and educator. She is a political activist in civil rights and women’s movement. Her novel The Color Purple (1982) won her the Pulitzer Prize.

This paper focuses on the theme of womanism in Alice Walker’s The Third Life of Grange Copeland. It discusses how the adverse period of slavery has taught African American women enough to fight for equality in gender. This novel explicitly declares her commitment to the ideology of womanism. Her novel explores the relationship between men and women, and the reason why women are always blamed for men’s failure. Alice Walker developed …show more content…

Between 1970 and 1981, Walker published two collections of short stories. Her first novel, The Third Life of Grange Copeland (1970) pointedly criticizes African American gender relationship and underscores the debilitating social and economic oppression suffered by African Americans in the segregated south. Unable to overcome the accumulation of debt inherent in the sharecropping system and considered less than human by his white superiors, Grange Copland vents his father’s brutality upon his own wife and children. In this novel Walker highlights personal accountability for one’s action and stresses the inviolability of the soul despite oppression and prejudice.

The Third Life of Grange Copeland unveils the brutal sexual oppression of African American women by their men, which jeopardizes the survival and wholeness of the entire community. The sheer physical survival of African American women are in danger as in the case of Margaret and Mem, who are directly or indirectly killed by their husbands. They are instrumental for their ruin and behave as regent of racial and patriarchal forces. Magaret and Mem subjected by their husbands to brutal violence, sexual assaults and economic exploitation.
The novel explores the relationship between men and women and the reason why women are always blamed for men’s failure. In her interview to John O’Brien, Alice Walker states her aim in writing The Third Life of Grange Copeland as

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