Independence In Barbara Kingsolver's The Bean Trees

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Diane von Furstenberg once stated “I wanted to be an independent woman, a woman who could pay for her bills, a woman who could run her own life.” Independence plays a big role in being able to be successful in life. Taylor, a girl that can be described as “different ,” is a person who is a strong believer in doing things by herself. She moved out when she learned how to drive and never went back. She gains a child and soon settles down in Tucson Arizona, where she starts her own life. In the novel The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, there are many obstacles Taylor goes through to set the theme of independence.
Kingsolver first shows independence when Taylor arrives at Mattie’s shop. She just gained a child that wasn’t even hers. Mattie shows Taylor the bean trees and she explains, “sure enough, they were one hundred percent purple:stems, leaves and pods…’ The Chinese lady next door gave them to me… They’re originally from seeds she brought over with her in nineteen-ought-seven, ‘ Mattie told me. ‘Can you picture that? Keeping the same beans going all these years?” (62-63) Having the beans being there for a long time symbolizes that it takes time for some things to work out. This is where Taylor first meets Mattie and starts living in Arizona. Taylor …show more content…

In this story the trees developed just like the characters. They are sitting around talking when Turtle says the word “beans”. Taylor thinks that she says the word “bees” but doesn’t realize that Turtle is looking at the wisteria vines. “Will you look at that, ‘I said. It was another miracle. The flower trees were turning into bean trees”(194). When one gets to this point it is close to the end when every character is finding their place. They are still developing but it’s not as messed up as it was in the beginning. Just like the trees they first start out as a seed and at some time they will become mature enough to produce what they are supposed to

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