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Alice Walker
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Alice Walker is an American author whose fiction, poetry, and essays have made her a central figure in courses on American literature, African American literature, women's studies, and contemporary fiction. Her work explores themes of race, gender, identity, family, and cultural heritage, giving students rich material for close reading and critical analysis. Because her writing draws on Southern regional life and African American experience, it fits naturally into discussions of regional fiction and the broader literary traditions that shaped twentieth-century American writing.

The papers archived here reflect several common approaches to Walker's work. Literary analysis of Everyday Use dominates, with students examining the story's characters — particularly Maggie, the mother, and Dee — to explore competing definitions of heritage and the meaning of objects like quilts within family and cultural memory. Essays on The Color Purple address themes of identity, survival, and transformation. Other papers take comparative or contextual angles, placing Walker alongside contemporary writers or situating her fiction within broader cultural and mythological frameworks.

A strong essay on Alice Walker typically anchors its argument in close textual evidence, paying careful attention to character motivation, symbolism, and narrative voice rather than offering only plot summary. When writing about heritage or cultural identity, it is important to define those terms precisely within the text rather than treating them as self-evident. A common pitfall is making broad claims about Walker's biography or historical context without tying them back to specific moments in the literary work itself — the text should always remain the primary source of evidence.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Power of Narrative and Voice
¶ … Janie in Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God and Celie in Alice Walker's the Color Purple
Research Paper Doctorate
Mythology concepts and cultural significance
¶ … Alice Walker that her works demonstrate a creation of modern American Mythology. So much so that her thematic works of modern mythology, riddled with the feminine, not the feminist, have been given a special name,…
Essay Doctorate
Alice Walker the Image of the Quilt:
What makes us who we are? A large part of our current lives are derived from the lives of those who came before us. Our family traditions and heritages are an important part of ourselves. In Alice Walker's The Color Purple and "Everyday Use," cloth, quilts, and the act of sewing are highlighted as a way to bring together the diversity of a family to provide for a strong structural foundation for preserving family traditions, allowing any family to survive and thrive despite any wide number of obstacles.
Paper Doctorate
Family Traditions 7 Cultural Legacies
This paper discusses how familial traditions are treated in literature. People try to formulate identity and all interactions in life will help in the formulation of this aspect of life. One of the strongest influences will be family and the customs and traditions of that family. Literature shows that there is either an acceptance of the values or a complete break from tradition.
Research Paper Doctorate
Everyday Use and Why I
Eudora Welty's story "Why I Live at the P.O." And Alice Walker's "Everyday Use" both employ an informal first person style with rich and realistic detail in order to create a vivid impression of the setting and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Historically Black Colleges Tuskegee University
The psychological, economic, political importance of historically black colleges
Paper High School
Beauty: concepts, aesthetics, and cultural perspectives
John Keats began Endymion with the now famous quote that "A thing of Beauty is a joy forever". Both Alice Walker and Susan Sontag demonstrate the veracity of this statement by providing examples of how this interminable quality of beauty has been subverted. Other aspects of beauty, such as its components of truth and love, are discussed as well.
Research Paper Doctorate
Celie and Shug in Alice
¶ … Celie and Shug in Alice Walker's the Color Purple
Research Paper Doctorate
The color purple
While setting is extremely important in most stories, it is essential to Alice Walker's The Color Purple. Celie's life is extremely tragic, but it is important to the outcome of the story for one to view Celie, not as a…
Paper Doctorate
Alice Walker\'s Short Story Everyday
Alice Walker's short story "Everyday Use" provides readers with a first-person account told from the perspective of an African American woman, ‘Mama', as she relates to her two daughters and to their understanding of their background. Alice Walker wrote this story during a period of turmoil for African Americans across the U.S. and it is likely that he intended it to serve as a tool to emphasize that many of the individuals who identified with their African roots failed to actually gain a complex understanding of their background. Walker practically wanted people to comprehend that it would be wrong for them to ignore years that the African community spent on the American continent in favor to embrace African cultural values. It is not necessarily that Walker was not interested in supporting the black power movement, as she also wanted its members to be well-acquainted with the importance of appreciating their background.