Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Alice Walkers Roselily - Two Stories in One :: Walker Roselily Essays

Alice Walkers Roselily - Two Stories in One In the short business relationship Roselily, Alice Walker tells two stories in one. The most obvious story is the one about the Black American woman Roselily, who stands before the alter, just about to tie a muslim, while she thinks about her past, wonders about the future and is questioning wheter she is making the right choice. The other, hidden story is the story about Black American women in general, their history and their ongoing search for something repair. The way I understand the short story, Roselilys story is, as it is presented to the reader through Roselilys thoughts as she is in the shopping centre of her wedding, a reflection of Black Americans (and womens in particular) situation around the 1960s. At this time, Blacks are free Americans with the equal rights as other Americans, in theory. Roselily is an commutative woman of her time, but world a single mother of four children, working long hours for most likely lous y wages in a sewing plant, she is far from free. The Blacks are no longer slaves in the cotton fields, they are now paid slaves in the refinement industry. Roselily is most aware of her situation, and she is instinctive to leave her past and start a new life with a new man. She has probably been searching for a better life for quite some time, by being with different men, who all could give her a child, but not a new life. I am sensing an urge in Roselily, to move on, symbolized by all the cars described in the short story They are constantly moving from one place to another, they give you mobility, prevent you from being stuck somewhere you do not want to be. Roselily knows that she does not want to stay in the sewing plant, she knows that she wants to move on to something better, but she does not know what better is, and she certainly doubts if what she has chosen will be better than what she had. Her divided personality is like the different groups of Blacks in the civil right s movements. Some Blacks valued segregation, some wanted their own nation, some wanted to be more African, some wanted to live like the White Americans, some were Muslims and some were Christians. They all agreed that their genuine situation was not acceptable, but they did not know how to improve it.

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