Trees Essay

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    something? Most people have had this happen to them they have gone through rough times or happy times which changes them, not only mentally but emotionally. This has happened in books such as The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver and the book Gifted hands by Ben Carson. Barbara Kingsolver’s story The Bean Trees is a story about a young woman named Missy who after getting a job and earning enough money to buy a car decides to go off on her own and leaves her mother. In her travels she meets different people

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    children have given up a family forever. According to dictionary.com, a family is “a group consisting of parents and children living together in a household”. This definition generates the idea that family does not have to be biological. In The Bean Trees, Kingsolver uses the intimacy between the character to suggest the idea that non biological families can be as strong or even stronger than biological ones. The connection to Taylor’s heritage helps to create a sense of family and belonging when she

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    valuable because it started as an involuntary relationship. In the novel The Bean Trees, Barbara Kingsolver shows us that the relationships we form by choice are different from the relationships we form out of necessity. In doing this she also shows us that the relationships we form out of necessity are the most meaningful. Barbara Kingsolver shows us that the relationship she has with her mother, a necessary

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    relationship. The overall symbol of the wisteria vines in Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees is an example of a symbiotic relationship. By working together for a shared survival, both the rhizobia and the wisteria vines are able to better thrive in their environment and achieve a balance that is only possible by the two factors working together. Kingsolver’s symbiotic relationships throughout The Bean Trees show how people can develop stronger relationships by working together and by developing

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    Through her novel The Bean Trees, Barbara Kingsolver attempts to convince her readers that motherhood, in all its various forms, is important to the development of children by exploring the maternal relationships of characters. Kingsolver introduces many forms of motherhood, from relation by blood to community bonds. Through the development of the characters in the novel, readers understand the impact that mothers have. The novel explores the effects of motherhood, both to the mothers and their children

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    The Bean Trees has various situations and many are relevant to day-to-day life, one of these situations that appear often is violence. Violence is prominent in day-to-day life and in The Bean Trees, the violence presented is various and affects the life of the abused in many ways, because there are various forms of people there are various forms of reactions. As a reader, the book brings a range of emotions, and creates strong connections with the characters, as the novel continues more abuse is

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    In The Bean Trees, Barbara Kingsolver uses characters and symbols to show that families are not genetically made up, rather built from love and support. As Kingsolver establishes the dynamic roles of Taylor Greer upon meeting Turtle and Lou Ann Ruiz throughout the novel, she also includes the symbolic significance of the rhizobia to illuminate the message of The Bean Trees. Kingsolver structures Taylor’s dynamic behaviors in ways that explain the definition of family. She appeals to the reader that

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    Coming of Age The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, is a story about characters coming of age. In life, people try to plan out their futures. But no one can really “tell the future” because he or she will grow and achieve self-actualization. Many characters in The Bean Trees go through this transition and become the complete opposite of what they were in the past. Whether the characters reach adulthood by leaving their home state, or their husband leaving them, they change for the better. Two characters

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    Feminist Views and Author Connections in The Bean Trees Barbara Kingsolver, author of The Bean Trees, emphasizes her societal views throughout the novel and tells the story in the first person narrative of Taylor Greer, a practical but spirited girl trying to escape her simple and somewhat boring life to a more exciting one. Taylor’s character reflects Kingsolver in the way that they both focus on creating a more just society in which women are treated as equals and have the same rights as men.

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    Uncertain Journey in the Bean Trees Uncertain journeys are numerous in Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees. Many characters in the novel put their current lives aside to go off in hopes of finding a better one. By embarking on these journeys, the plot lines begin and end with risk taking. Taylor’s move away from Pittman and her taking Turtle, Louann not going after her husband, and the many risks of Estevan and Esperanza, create conflicts which drive the plot of The Bean Trees. While growing up

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