Alice Walker
Alice Walker is an African American essayist, novelist and poet. She is described as a “black feminist.”(Ten on Ten) Alice Walker tries to incorporate the concepts of her heritage that are absent into her essays; such things as how women should be independent and find their special talent or art to make their life better. Throughout Walker’s essay entitled “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens,” I determined there were three factors that aided Walker gain the concepts of her heritage which are through artistic ability, her foremothers and artistic models.
“In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens” touches mainly upon family heritage and the way her heritage was created. In Atwan’s Ten on Ten, you will find the essay on the Mothers’ Gardens. On page 83 it states, “For they were going nowhere immediate, and the future was not yet within their grasp.” This quote signifies how mothers and grandmothers would always be set serving the men in their lives; for their entire lives, however, there was a different future, a plan that they didn’t see yet. This plan was for them to identify their artistic ability, whether if it was through singing, writing or making quilts.
Throughout the essay, “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens,”Alice Walker’s mentions her foremothers. Women like Jean Toomer, Phillis Wheatley and Zora Neale Hurtson, who were all either poets or writers. Mike Fike has also reco...
...James Robert Saunders, "Womanism as the Key to Understanding Zora Neale Hurston's `Their Eyes Were Watching God' and Alice Walker's `The Color Purple'," in The Hollins Critic, Vol. XXV, No. 4, October, 1988, pp. 1-11. Reproduced by permission.
Calvins campaign was not unique, throughout Europe reformists were achieving political and social gains, utilising scripture as a criterion for change. (Wallace, 2004, p90)
The life of Anna Julia Cooper (1858-1964) affords rich opportunities for studying the developments in African-American and Ameri can life during the century following emancipation. Like W.E.B. DuBois, Cooper's life is framed by especially momentous years in U.S. history: the final years of slavery and the climactic years of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960's. Cooper's eclect ic and influential career mirrored the times. Although her life was privileged in relation to those of the majority of African-Americans, Cooper shared in the experiences of wrenching change, elevating promise, and heart-breaking disappointment. She was accordingly able to be an organic and committed intellectual whose eloquent speech was ensnarled in her concern for the future of African-Americans.
Calvin begins the argument in the right place. He begins by addressing important issues of true understanding of Christianity. Calvin has already formed the doctrine of providence in chapter 16. In this chapter, he confronts the wrong understandings of providence. In the first premise stated above, it can be seen as a different way to understand why things take place. People view events as a result to fortune instead of accounting them to be controlled by God. It was a great idea for Calvin to bring up this first point because it is one of the major alternatives of the
Visceral. Raw. Controversial. Powerful. The works which Kara Walker creates have elicited strong and diametric responses from members of the art community. She manipulates the style of antebellum era silhouettes, intended to create simple, idealistic images, and instead creates commentaries on race, gender, and power within the specific history of the United States. She has also been accused of reconfirming the negative stereotypes of black people, especially black women, that the viewer and that the white, male dominated art world may hold. This perspective implies that both her subjects and her artworks are passive when confronted with their viewers. Personally, I believe that more than anything, Walker’s work deals in power -- specifically, the slim examples of power black individuals have over their
John Calvin founded Calvinism. John believed that churches are supposed to do the right thing and do what God wants. Calvinism had some certain rules such as only using bible names for their kids. People, who joined Calvinism couldn’t swear, dance, or insult anyone at the inn. John Calvin came up with the idea of predestination, which means that the fate of your soul was decided by God. With predestination, they believed that your actions would show what God planned to do with your fate. Calvinism can be summed up by “The Five Points of Calvinism” or “TULIP”. T stands for “Total Depravity” meaning that not everyone is lost. They have to reach out on their own to be saved. U
Walker, Alice. (1974). “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens.” Ways of Reading. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, pp. 694-701.
Gwendolyn Brooks is the female poet who has been most responsive to changes in the black community, particularly in the community’s vision of itself. The first African American to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize; she was considered one of America’s most distinguished poets well before the age of fifty. Known for her technical artistry, she has succeeded in forms as disparate as Italian terza rima and the blues. She has been praised for her wisdom and insight into the African Experience in America. Her works reflect both the paradises and the hells of the black people of the world. Her writing is objective, but her characters speak for themselves. Although the idiom is local, the message is universal. Brooks uses ordinary speech, only words that will strengthen, and richness of sound to create effective poetry.
• AW calls herself “a womanist “, her term for a black feminist. She is one of the female Afro-American writers founding the concept “New Black Renaissance” .
The emotions of love and hate are at the forefront of the theme in this play by William Shakespeare. The Oxford Standard English Dictionary defines ‘love’ as ‘to have strong feelings of affection for another adult and be romantically and sexually attracted to them, or to feel great affection for a friend or person in your family’ and defines ‘hate’ as ‘a feeling of dislike so strong that it demands action dislike intensely, to feel antipathy or aversion towards someone or something’. However, words cannot portray such wide and powerful emotions. Love and hate include elements of life, passion, long-term bonding and dislike, disgust and loathing respectively. It is because Shakespeare incorporates each of these elements into the play that Romeo and Juliet is the ultimate story of love and hate.
Much like many of the other reformers, his beliefs coexisted with Martin Luther’s. Lutheranism began to lose its momentum and Calvin kept the reformation alive through his new doctrines. God has eternal selection, which is where predestination and the elect come from. It tries to justify why some people are good and others bad, that not every soul can be saved. “By predestination we mean the eternal degree of God . . . all are not created on equal terms . . . some are preordained to eternal life, others to eternal damnation . . . predestinated to life or to death . . .” (Calvin). This gives God a new authority and keeps the reformation alive for Protestantism to
In the letter John Calvin brought up several key points, which support how important scripture is in someone’s life. First of all, Calvin introduced king Francis to the circumstances the book was written, then he talked about the plea for the persecuted evangelicals, where he addressed that a king should be a Godly king in order to fulfill his roles. Furthermore, he explained more in depth that the church leaders oppose the reformation teachings in many forms, then he suggested that church fathers seem to favor customs over truth. Finally, he drew the king’s attention to be aware of false charges as the innocent await divine vindication. Calvin was trying to build the king’s awareness, and discussed many potential issues that the church is facing and could face in the near future.
This ideology greatly differs from Luther, Carlstadt, and Zwingli, as their beliefs were that by faith alone salvation could be obtained, where no mention of predestination is referred. However, though Calvin’s predestination theory was widely dissimilar than Luther, Carlstadt, and Zwingli, his view of people not being able gain salvation by deeds done in the temporal world are reaffirmed in his writings are reform doctrine (The European Sourcebook, 165-167). Calvin’s goal was in efforts to control the morals normed by scripture and to condemn anything remotely considered blasphemy or Catholic in their origin. Calvinism has been considered closely related to Puritanism given that Calvin ideology was to repress lewd or indecent human behavior inevitably calling for proper less freeing behavior. Despite Calvin’s strict regulations of social and behavioral norm accepted Calvin appealed to helping people socially that later would equate to a Godly
The definition of sociology is the study of society. Social criticism is the practice of analyzing a literary work by examining the cultural, political and economical context in which it was written or received. Alice Walker’s work demonstrates this type criticism very well; from The Color Purple to Everyday Use, or any of her earlier short stories. The majority of her work reveals the struggle of African Americans in society, especially women. Furthermore, her stories mirror a lot of the social characteristic that were taking place in America, from the 1940’s on; thus, making Alice Walker the epitome of sociological criticisms.
John Calvin, a French theologian, became the figurehead of the second generation of the Protestant reformers. In 1536, Calvin published Institutes of the Christian Religion. It emphasized the authority of scripture, and the belief that God had predetermined only a select few to enter the kingdom of Heaven. He spread his ideas throughout Geneva until 1538 when he was forced into Germany by anti-Protestants. He was asked to return in 1541 where he established a religious government based on Protestant ideas that he had acquired while in Martin Luther’s home-country of Germany. In 1555, Calvin became the supreme leader of Geneva. Contrary to Luther’s passion, Calvin regarded Protestantism with a more cold and intellectual approach. Under his rule, anyone who did not share his narrow view was either exiled or executed. This allowed Geneva to become the flourishing epicenter of Protestantism, and spread Calvinist views across Europe. This rapid expansion led to numerous branches of the Protestant Movement such as the Puritans of England, the Reformed Church of the Netherlands, and the Presbyterian Scots