Although her book was made into a film, Walker says she feels that movies often destroy a person's ability to dream from deep within them. She states that there is a connection between a person's dreams and the path he takes.
This is the story of two sisters, Celie and Nettie, keeping a relationship which sustains time, distance and silence over many years, a story about love between two women and extreme male abuse and brutality.
Summary
The story is written from the sight of Celie in form of a diary which contains letters first to God, then to her younger sister Nettie. You can call this kind of book Epistolary Novel. When Celie is 14 years old, her stepfather, who she thinks is her father, begins to rape her, causing the birth of two children which he gives away to a missionary friend of his. A short time after her mother has died, Celie is married with Mr.___, her abusive husband who wanted to marry Nettie but her stepfather said no. Nettie runs away from home and comes to their house, but she rejects Mr.___, so he kicks her out on the street and Celie sends her to the same missionaries who have unknowingly adopted her children (a girl called Olivia and a boy called Adam). Nettie goes with them to Africa as a missionary, where she stays for thirty years, faithfully writing letters to her sister, never knowing if she's receiving them. After years of abuse, Celie begins to become more optimistic when Shug Avery, a blues singer and old lover of Mr.___'s, is brought home by him because she's sick, so that Celie can nurse her. The two women fall in love with each other. Then, Celie finds out that Mr.___had hidden all the letters Nettie had written to her over the years. She starts to read them where Nettie's live is revealed. She lives with Corrine and Samuel and with Celie's children by the Olinka in a small village in West Africa. They all teach and nurse and Samuel preaches. Because there is such a strong ressemblance between Nettie and the childre, Corrine thinks that she's her mother and so agonizes herself to death. After she dies, Samuel and Nettie decide to get married and Adam marries Tashi, an Olinkan woman and they all return to America.
Meanwhile, Celie leaves Mr.___ to go to Memphis with Shug. Here they live in Shug's house. She makes a good living with singing and Celie starts to sew pants, first for Shug, then finally makes a business out of this hobby. But as Celie is away for some time to look after the house she has inheritted from her stepfather, Shug leaves her to have an affair with a 19 year old boy which whom she travels around to the Southwest to visit Shug's grown-up children. Celie
stays in her house, forgives and becomes friends with Mr.___, who has changed a lot. Before and when Shug comes back, she is very happy with her friends and her sewing. At the end, the last thing to make her life perfect, her sister and her children, come home to her even if she had received a telegram saying that their ship had been sunk a long time ago.
Characters
Celie: The main character of the book has a very hard life. She was abused as a child, had to give up her two children and went right from one bad situation to another, suffering through a loveless marriage, the only happiness being Shug Avery, with whom she falls in love and who learns her how to be as strong and woman. In the beginning, Celie is weak and poor, but after she had lived with Shug, she is beautiful and indepentent adn able to forgive her husband for all the abuse.
Nettie: Celie's sister has chosen an easier life, sheltered from the abuse her older sister has lived through. She was always good at school and in learning and teached Celie when her stepfather didn't allow her to go to school anymore because of her pregnancy. Nettie has lived in Africa as a missionary and brought up her niece and nephew, whom she always saw as her own children.
Mr.: Celie's husband had first fallen in love with Nettie but had to marry Celie. He loved Shug Avery through his whole life and even had children with her, but was so controlled by his father so that he couldn't marry her. He always hit Celie, for the only reason that she wasn't Shug (or like her). He has kids, but isn't a very good father. I think Celie calls him Mr.___, which sounds very anonymous, because she never felt near to him. She doesn't even know his Christian name for a long time. Only in the end, when they become friends, she calls him Albert in her letters. The ___ in his name is there to represent how Celie doesn't know anything abour him.
Shug Avery: Mr.'s ex-lover is an amazing and famous jazz singer who always says what's on her mind. She is strong enough to stand up against Mr.who would never hit her. In the beginning, she treats Celie like a maid, but then they fall in love and she protects her best as she can, she's the first one in her life to take care of her.
Sofia: She is the wife of Mr.'s son Harpo, which was a marriage out of love, but she leaves him, because he wants to beat her, and goes to live with her sisters.
One day, she hits the white major in town because she doesn't want to become his maid and this event changes her life. From then on she is arrested for many years for insulting a white person. Later, she has to become the white people's maid, but without the right to see her own children and finally she is free to live at home again and returns to her husband.
Shug and Celie
The relationship between these two women cuts very deep. Both of them help each other to become what they really want to be because both were oppressed people. Celie was oppressed by her lack of love and self esteem. Shug is caught in other people's image of her. What they really want is to become members of a loving family becauce that's what they never really had. Both of the women became what they were told they would. Celie was told from the beginning on that she were ugly, useless and worthless, so she always thought that it is. To Shug the people always said she was a whore an dso she became a woman wanted by every man and hated by every woman. For both their friendship was the first opportunity to open theirselves and to speak about their problems. Celie depended on Shug for love and security and the love they had for each other can be interpreted as a sort of lesbianism. But even if their relationship had an erotic touch, the motherly way the women felt about each other is much more important. Both were baby and mother at the same time.
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Christine REICHL, 2000, Walker, Alice - The Color Purple, Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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The Color Purple (Maxnotes Literature Guides)
Alice Walker, Christopher Hubert, English Literature Study Guides
till
Inhalt ok - Sprache schlecht.
vom sprachlichen stil ist der text nicht besonders, auch viele grammatische fehler sidn enthalten.
on Thursday, June 06, 2002-