Trees Essay

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    Sacrifices made in the novel The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, signifies strong femininity through the main character, Taylor Greer. The Bean Trees follows an idealistic and optimistic journey of Taylor as she caravanned across the country from the bare fields of Kentucky to the “fluffy rocks” of Arizona. A family is a huge thing to most everyone, but not everyone has a strong family. Using active dynamic characters and sacrificial elements, Kingsolver perfectly illuminates the triumphs of Greer

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    Families all over the world experience struggles such as poverty that could lead to depression, but if you have the perseverance like Taylor in “The Bean Trees,” you can successfully survive in society. Taylor deals with some of the worst situations a person could have thrown at them, but she manages to deal with these issues, while providing for herself and her child. Many families all over America experience poverty, and the ones who are most affected are the children. The impact of poverty on

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    The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, is her first novel, published in 1988. It is a novel that tells the story of a young girl who leaves her hometown to create a new life for herself. Along her journey, she finds a group of friends who offer endless love and support, allowing her to fulfill a happy life. Although she is presented with many obstacles, she is determined to continue her journey, in which she is faced with a lift-changing decision. Taylor Greer, the protagonist in the novel, must

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    The theme of The Bean Trees is: Single motherhood is accompanied with struggles and hardships nevertheless, in the end; the love for their child outweighs all. Taylor begins her journey with distaste for the idea of motherhood and how one’s life has to change for that child. In spite of that, when she is forced into the role of Turtle’s mother, her viewpoint begins to change from a negative perspective to a positive one as she starts to care about the child. By the time the finale of the novel comes

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    In the two novels, The Bean Trees and I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, authors Barbara Kingsolver and Maya Angelou use both of their stories to challenge the stereotypes that society has put in place about the idea of femininity and the gender roles of men and women. In The Bean Trees, protagonist Taylor Greer unexpectedly becomes a mother when she cares for a Native American child given to her on the side of a road, however, she does not behave like society’s version of a maternal figure in that

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    On a very warm, muddy day in the forest of Nowhere, Rachel Springfoot bounded through the trees on her quick feet. She ran as fast as she could on top of the thick layer of moss that covered the forest floor. She sprinted past her favorite climbing tree, her many braids, large and small, streaming out behind her. She smelled the wet dirt and leaves of the forest. She stopped, out of breath, at the tallest tree of her quarter. She started to climb. Watching her climb was quite interesting because

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    Motherhood in the Bean Trees The book The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, is a coming of age story about a young girl, Taylor, that is thrust into motherhood when a baby is left in her car. Taylor however, is not the only example of a mother in the story. There is Lou Ann and Esperanza, both literal mothers, but only one of them has their child to take care of. There is Mattie, one of the first people that Taylor meet in Tucson, and who becomes almost a surrogate-mother for both her, and also

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    role (for example, a mother taking her kid to the doctor,) in the family. Members of a traditional family in this case are either maritally or biologically related. Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees has many characters who would consider themselves, or be considered, part of different families. The Bean Trees addresses and deals with the fact that nontraditional families can be just as strong as what society has defined as a ‘traditional’ family. The characters Taylor and Turtle are an example of a

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    Abandonment in The Bean Trees Abandonment is a feeling known to many people. There are different types and levels of abandonment. In The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver, many characters have been introduced to the feeling of abandonment. Abandoning or being abandoned is constant in the novel and Kingsolver uses it to link all of the characters together. Taylor Greer has lived in Kentucky all her life. Yet, the life available to her in Kentucky is not what she always dreamed of: "none of

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    Kingsolver wrote these three main supporting characters going through difficult events, but making it through them with the strength they have as single females. The female strength in these three women is one of the main themes in the book The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver. In the book Mattie is definitely a strong character. When Taylor meets Mattie she is surprised. Back in Pittman, where Taylor is from a woman would never own and run a tire store all by herself. Mattie may not be gaining much

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