Kindred Essay

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    One of the main plot devices of the novel Kindred is the protagonist’s tendency to spontaneously teleport through both time and space whenever either Rufus’ life is in peril, if she is in her own time, or if her own life is in peril, if she is in Rufus’ time. However the book provides almost no technical details into the principal of operation that transportation is achieved by. This means that all information on the time travelling mechanism must be gleaned from subtext. Latt woke up with a very

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    Similarities between Dana’s relationship with Rufus and with Kevin In Kindred, a book written by Octavia Butler, the main character Dana has central relationships with two white males, Kevin and Rufus, one from Dana’s time and one from the antebellum South. The similarities between Dana's relationships with Kevin and Rufus are surprisingly many, considering the two very different time periods these men come from and their differing points of view as a result. Kevin and Rufus also have very dissimilar

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    Octavia Butler’s 1979 science fiction novel, Kindred, tells a story featuring two African-American women who, despite the brutality of the antebellum south, form a bond with one another under the hand of a plantation owner. Kindred is often classified as a neo-slave narrative that, through Butler’s writing, often explores the theme of duality, which we see in the way she mirrors characters, reflecting them as two sides of the same coin. The main characters discussed in this essay are Alice, a free

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    In Kindred Octavia Butler highlights how Dana’s fear of the past will interfere with the present. Butler demonstrates how Dana tries to fit into the 1800s to accomplish her goals and not have consequences in the present. The patriarchy is shown in both time periods although it grows or manifests differently. In kindred Dana travels back in time to save Rufus her ancestor who always seems to get himself in trouble. Dana is trying to make a difference in the past but it is very hard when all she does

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    Octavia Butler's Kindred Essay

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    Octavia Butler's Kindred Throughout the novel Kindred, Butler compared and contrasted modern African Americans with African Americans that were slaves in the novel. Some of the many ways she compares them are through education, work ethic, and their personal feelings about and/or how they handle their own slavery. Education is very important to the blacks that were enslaved in the novel. The slaves valued education even more than the modern African Americans like Dana who had

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    December 14, 1924 was a bright, beautiful winter morning, the sky a vibrant blue without a cloud roaming around. The previous night, a heavy snowfall had powdered and blanketed the ground. Children all around town were enjoying playing, skipping, and laughing in the city of Paris, France. Ever since Alma was an infant she adored strolling through the narrow alleys and backstreets of Paris, one street in particular always deserted, made it her favorite. Alma had the street all to herself. As she

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    Kindred is a science-fiction novel by Octavia E. Butler, that follows the story of the African-American lady Dana as she travels back in time to a time of slavery to help out her ancestor Rufus. She is sent back and forth to her time and Rufus’. Every time she is brought back to Rufus, her stays get longer and longer. The Myth of Persephone. A Greek myth that teaches a lesson to the reader. Persephone is the daughter of Zeus and the harvest goddess Demeter and is the queen of the underworld. Who

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    living through that such thing. Just because one may be aware, or understands a certain situation as it may pertain to the either themselves or others around them, does not allow them the opportunity to name the situation as a reality. In the novel, Kindred, by Octavia E. Butler, one can see how the author believes that one’s environment and, or training will shape their self-image and, thus, their feelings toward

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    Kindred is a moving story of a young black woman, Dana Franklin, who is transported from her home in California in the year 1967, back to Maryland in 1815. The author, Octavia Butler, specifically chose 1967 to write her novel in because it was during the civil rights movement. The Loving vs. Virginia was a landmark civil rights case in 1967 which overturned the laws that prohibited white and colored people from marrying each other. The other time period in which the novel is based in, starting in

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    meaning to each person affected by it. According to Miles and Brown, “The concept of racism is heavily negatively loaded, morally and politically” (3). All the way through history, racism has generated grief for those who fall victim to the problem. “Kindred” by Octavia Butler explains how a black woman is able to take a journey back in time to encounter and witness slavery up close and personal. In Natasha Trethewey “Bellocq's Ophelia”, the reader is able to recognize Ophelia’s yearning to be seen as

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