The Color Purple Essay

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    The book The Color Purple by Alice Walker is about a fourteen-year-old girl named Celie who is uneducated, poor, and abused. Celie starts writing letters to god about her abuse she receives daily from her father, Alphonso. Alphonso raped Celie resulting in her becoming impregnated with a girl who Alphonso both stole and killed. Celie also gives birth to another one of Alphonso´s children a baby boy who Alphonso also stole. Alphonso forces Celie in marriage to Mr._____ who also abuses her which emotionally

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    It is generally true that books are often banned because they display inappropriate themes. "The Color Purple" shows themes of gender inequality, sexually explicitness, and violence throughout the book. There are multiple perspectives on the book; to keep or to ban. Personally, I stand for banning this book because of its sensitive themes. "The Color Purple" is about a young girl named Celie and her sister Nettie, who have a very close relationship. Celie is abused and raped by her father at age

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    A Shade of Purpose The color purple is more than just a color, it is a sense of purpose, dignity, and pride. The concept of searching for a purpose in one’s life, as well as the concept of suppressing one’s pride, is beautifully conveyed in The Color Purple; the double meaning of the color purple is weaved throughout the novel in a way that holds its readers captivated. From the very beginning of the novel, The Color Purple, the reader receives a thick essence of desolation and despondency. The

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    The extremely influential twentieth century novel, The Color Purple by Alice Walker reveals multiple injustices that were present in our world throughout the 1900s. Walker’s talent and experience as an African-American enabled her to effectively capture the horrors that accompanied racist and societal issues that timelessly plague our country. Walker structured The Color Purple as an epistolary novel, a type of book that is portrayed through a collection of journal entries. As a result, this confessional

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    In the Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Color Purple, there is one constant occurrence throughout this fictional masterpiece: abuse. The protagonist, Celie, endures chronic physical, emotional, mental, verbal, and sexual abuse almost her entire life. Celie's constant endurance of multiple types of abuse displays the damaging physical and psychological effects of the average African-American woman in the early 1900s. Alice Walker tells the miraculous story of a young African-American woman's survival

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    The Color Purple is a 1985 film written by Menno Meyjes and directed by Steven Spielberg, based upon a novel by Alice Walker. The major actors in the film were: Oprah Winfrey, Whoopi Goldberg, Danny Glover, and Margret Avery. Celie, the main character, is treated harshly by the world, a bashful, afraid girl whose life mostly involves fleeing from the men who want to beat and rape her. Celie’s eventual flourishing delivers a joyful experience, one of the greatest ones I’ve gotten from a movie. The

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    The Series of unfortunate events in The Color Purple The Color Purple by Alice Walker starts off with a rather graphic view of a young black woman denominated as Celie. Celie has to learn how to survive her abusive past. She also has to figure out a way she can release her past in search of the true meaning of love. Alice walker wrote this book as an epistolary novel to further emphasize Celie`s life events. From the beginning of the novel Alice Walker swiftly establishes an intimate contact with

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    Through the help of women, other girls are able to be inspired and motivated to change their life with positive effects. This is a critical idea of a novel “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker. This view is emphasized proficiently in this novel and concept had a lasting impression upon the ideals of the time period where the novel took place which was post “World War I” in Georgia from 1910 to 1940. Walker's writing's helped to break the barrier that existed in most people's minds of sexism from her

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    In her award winning epistolary novel, The Color Purple, Alice Walker tells the story of Celie, a young African American woman growing up in the American South during the Reconstruction period (1930s). In a series of letters to God and to her younger sister Nettie, Celie tells the story of her life, ranging from the trauma of physical and sexual abuse she encounters to her success and wealth she earns as an adult. If suitable, The Color Purple is an essential learning tool for mature high school

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    as a novel containing graphic violence, sexuality, chauvinism, and racism, The Color Purple was banned in numerous schools across the United States. Crude language, brutality, and explicit detail chronicle the life of Celie, a young black woman exposed to southern society’s harshness. While immoral, the events and issues discussed in Alice Walker’s The Color Purple remain pervasive in today’s society. The Color Purple epitomizes the hardships that African Americans faced at the turn of the century

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