YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Russell Hoban Riddley Walker
Essays 61 - 90
This is a critical analysis of a pair of essays contained in Alice Walker's collection of activist messages, Anything We Love Can ...
the text of the pamphlet by Sean Wilentz, the chief aim of Walkers Appeal was to inspire American blacks "with a vision of hope an...
This paper addresses the ways in which Alice Walker's, The Color Purple portrays different feminist points of view, as well as tho...
This paper examines the crusade against female genital mutilation. The author cites Alice Walker's book, Anything We Love Can Be ...
Wangero Leewanika (formerly known as "Dee") cannot see them as such anymore than the people "Aunt Phoenix" encounters on her walk ...
In five pages this paper analyzes how Alice Walker thematically develops oppression in her novel The Color Purple. One source is ...
In four pages this paper argues that Walker's sentimentality serves to anthropomorphize the horse which prevents its animal nature...
In six pages the enslavement of African American females as depicted in Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, Toni Mo...
In six pages this paper examines how powerful women are depicted in The Widow of Ephesus, Alice Walker's 'Everyday Use' and Kate C...
In eight pages these texts by Alice Walker, Mary Louise Pratt, and Alice Walker are examined in terms of unconscious and 'magical'...
This nine page essay explores the theme of womanism that characterizes both Alice Walker's life and her writings. Meaning and app...
In five pages this paper analyzes if Spielberg structurally changed Walker's novel in his film version and concludes that he does ...
In five pages this paper examines how Celie's identity was molded by her relationships in Alice Walker's The Color Purple. There ...
This paper outlines the differences between views of feminism seen in Toni Morison's, Sula, and Alice Walker's, The Color Purple. ...
This essay discusses the influence of Zora Neale Hurston in regards to Alice Walker's perspective on black oral tradition and femi...
This essay pertains to Margaret Edson's play "Wit," and Alice Walker's short story "Everyday Use." The writer argues that each of ...
about life, meeting Shug who is her husbands lover. She grows stronger and more intelligent as the story progresses and in the end...
steps back. Critics have largely agreed on the substandard quality of British cinema in the years immediately following World War ...
philosophical movement, having been founded in direct opposition to the tenets of modernism (namely, the scientific objectivity an...
This essay offers critical analysis of Alice Walker's The Color Purple. The writer draws on supporting sources to argue that siste...
This essay contrasts that similarities and differences between the way that Shanym Fiske and Sonal Singh and Sushma Gupta address...
struggle to find her identity, an African American identity, is obviously influenced by the white society. This is noted when her ...
likely to go to a full jury trial * have considerable impact on the public perception (too much?) (Chapter Topics, 2007). An exa...
In a novel in which the narrator is recounting the entirety of the action after the fact, the narrator already knows everything th...
in which 19th century blacks in Havana and New Orleans were able to maintain their identity and resist the misery of slavery by pa...
pleasure he has enjoyed is a violation of his rights" (Walker). As a man he is ignorantly assuming that he has the right to have s...
there are certain things a person must do, certain things a man must feel and never turn away from. So many men were lost in their...
she has moved to the city and been educated. One sees perhaps the only conflict this mother has in her life because it is a confl...
But the memory of the house is misleading, because the author also says that much of the time they lived there she was angry, hope...
the story, the children would be summoned, and the narrators father would let them go, saying something to the effect of "to hell ...