Alice Walker, The Color Purple
Alice Walker (1944-present); Rubin "Hurricane"
Carter (1937-2014); Viktor Frankl (1905-1997); C. G. Jung (1875-1961);
Friedrich Nietzsche (1875-1900); Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)
Alice Walker is an author and activist who
is best known for The Color Purple, an acclaimed novel that was
also made into a film.
- Alice Walker was born in Putnam County, Georgia, the
eighth and youngest child of a sharecropper. She was very unusual for
her time in that she was able to go to Spelman College, and then Sarah
Lawrence, a private liberal arts college, from which she graduated in
1965.
- She studied and eventually wrote about black women
authors. The Color Purple was the first and foremost of her
novels.
- It is written in the epistolary genre, as a series of
letters, many of them to God, adopting a format from the historical
experience of African Americans.
- Her writing style and the addressee of her letters
changes over the course of the novel, from one addressing a distant,
fearsome deity to one that is intimate with those around her. God
begins as a fierce, white man, and evolves into a loving, immanent
presence that pervades nature.
- The themes of the dark side include racism, sexism,
classism, heterosexism, and sexual assault.
- There is a complex relationship between traditional
religion (Protestant Christian), the newfound spirituality of the protagonist
Celie, heterosexuality, homosexuality, and bisexuality.
Guiding Questions
- What is the nature of divinity in the novel? How many
kinds are there? Do they exist in a hierarchy?
- What is the nature of love? How many different kinds
are there?
- What is the relationship between religion, spirituality,
and sexuality?
- What is the relationship between social consciousness
and individual awakening
Comparisons
Kierkegaard: faith and doubt; sin and redemption; good and
evil
Krishna, Arjuna, and the Bhagavad Gita: karma and liberation
(moksa); delusion and knowledge (jnana; gnosis)
Jung: conscious and unconscious; the shadow, complexes, and archetypes;
the healing power of the Self (vs ego-consciousness)
Frankl: meaning and meaninglessness
Carter: being asleep to the truth and awakening to oneness of the true
Self