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Aidoo, Changes, A Love Story Term Paper

Esi also comes to understand, within Chapter 20, that she has essentially traded her first, claustrophobic marriage to Oko for an altogether opposite marriage, one in which she never even sees her second husband. Fusena, and his children with her remain Ali's priority, as Esi slowly and painfully comes to understand. After Ali presents Esi with her new maroon sports car, announcing to her proudly, "This is your car, and here are the keys" (p. 147), as if all should be fine now, both soon realize, shortly thereafter when they go inside to eat breakfast together, that when they have finished discussing the car itself, they have nothing more to say to each other. What hurts Esi even more than that, however, is when Ali has her...

149).
But Esi's powerful new sports car also becomes a surprising metaphor for the freedom she feels on her way home after dropping Ali at the Twentieth Century Hotel. Today she has received some clarity, even if it has been by way of confirmation of her suspicions and fears. Driving back home, she asks herself "To wit: in what way was her situation different from what it would have been if she has simply stayed as Ali's mistress . . . " (Aidoo, p. 149). To that question, Esi realizes, she has no good answer.

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Aidoo, Ama Ata. Changes, A Love Story. New York: The…

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Aidoo, Ama Ata. Changes, A Love Story. New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York. 1991.
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