Everyday Use by Alice Walker has a Great Moral

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Alice Walker’s story “Everyday Use” tells a great moral. It is narrated by Mama, and she has two daughters. Dee, the beautiful and educated daughter is visiting home. Mama says: “Maggie will be nervous until after her sister goes,” she is the shy and jealous daughter (Walker 166). Their house burned down ten or twelve years ago. Dee watched the house she hated engulf in flames, as Mama carried out a badly burned Maggie. Dee dislikes that she was raised in a poor family, and she went off to school to gain an education. She later changed her last name to Wangero. Mama and Maggie had very little education, but they were happy with their simple life. Walker’s extreme differences and few similarities between the two characters throughout the story clarified her theme: One’s heritage should be valued through everyday use. Maggie and Dee come across as blatantly different characters in the story, but they still have a few similarities. They come from the same background, and both girls grow up in a poor family. Maggie and Dee both want the quilts, but for completely different reasons. They...

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