Family Heritage In Everyday Use By Alice Walker

1011 Words3 Pages

Family Heritage In the short story “Everyday Use” Alice Walker portrays the difference in African American heritage between two sisters. She shows a special emphasis on a handed down tradition from generation to generation. She has two daughters which she loves very much, one who believes value is money and the other who cherishes her family heirlooms. Although the mother is not as wordly as her daughter Dee has become, her instinct in the end to side with her less fortunate daughter is her way of preserving their heritage over superficial cultural misguidance. Momma always doing her best for her girls understands there are differences between the two. Dee, who is the older of the two, is the more educated daughter. Dee is superficial and looks at everything how it compares to the value of money. Maggie is younger daughter who cherishes the love of her family, the items her family passes down to her, but is very ashamed of her looks. Momma is much like her younger daughter Maggie. She isn’t superficial and takes to heart having family and the things that are passed down from generation to generation. Dee has very different values from her mother …show more content…

Momma asks Dee what happened to her name and she says, “She’s dead. I couldn’t bear it any longer, being named after the people who oppress me”. (27) Dee has no idea her name comes from her own heritage. Momma explains to Dee, “You know as well as me you was named after your aunt Dicie. Dicie is my sister. She named Dee. We called her ‘Big Dee’ after Dee was born” (28). Wangero is very well educated and is only trying to understand the African portion of her heritage, but she in blind to the heritage from her family she grew up with. She looks down on her momma and younger sister, not realizing they are the most important parts of her

Open Document