Juxtaposition In Alice Walker's Work

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Walker's work is superior to other abolitionist writers of his time due to his articulation against African enslavement in a scholarly and literary style, steeped in the ethos of western culture. As David Turner states in his introduction, "[The work] expound[s] a branch of theoretical or practical knowledge, or present[s] in an impressive and persuasive imaginative form, a moral, religious or philosophical thesis or doctrine”. Much like Harriet Beecher-Stowe, Walker was able to captivate and entrance White America. Stowe’s perspective and novel which features an enslaved couple, brought to the door steps of White America the horror of slavery when family ties are broken. (Created Equal 336) However, it is Walker's work which provided an actual critique to the system of slavery, unlike Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s …show more content…

He writes, "The Indians of North and of South America, the Greeks, the Jews, the Irish...all the inhabitants of the earth, (except however, the sons of Africa) are called men..but we, (colored people) and our children are brutes (Walker 27). In juxtaposing the treatment of the African against peoples of other tribes and nations, Walker further illustrates the injustices of his people. The use of the compare and contrast model throughout Walker’s Appeal helps to showcase the plight of his people. The dramatic tone of Walker’s words also aids his message his vivid use of both adjectives and descriptions pull on the pathos of readers. In particular, White readers who are familiar to the crimes against, “the Israelites in Egypt, the Helots in Sparta, and of the Roman Slaves, whose sufferings under those ancient and heathen nations,..with wretchedness and endless miseries” (Walker 90). Lastly, Walkers single handedly eliminate the idea that, Africans were incapable of complex reasoning, rational differentiation, and fluent conversation and culture of

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