Survival and Change in Alice Walker's The Color Purple
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Department of English
Abstract
This thesis seeks to study the identity crisis of female characters mainly Celie and Nettie.
Awakening of the identity comes from the domination of male characters. This novel shows that
in the patriarchal society marriage is one of the complexities which sometimes minimize the
effect of a self-identity of female.The Color Purple presents the situation in which female
characters search their identity but are beaten down and kept aside by the patriarchal society. It is
the society and its tyrannical behavior that made the female identity submerged, subordinated.
The novel presents a women’s search for identity. Celie, the woman protagonist of the novel, a
poor southern black woman who is victimized physically and emotionally by male characters
and through her consistent effort female identity is regained ultimately. The novel depicts a black
woman Celie struggling for spiritual and physical survival. Celie begins her life as a physically
and psychologically oppressed young girl who is unknown about herself. Amale character like
Alphonso rapes her and threatens her not to tell about it to anybody. This paternal threat
completely silences Celie. He uses every means to silence her. Later on she becomes the wife of
Mr.__ another male figure in her life, who alsocontinues to exploit her in different ways. There
too she becomes the victim of sexual violence. For Celie the sex with Mr.__ is like rape.
Though completely silenced by patriarchal authority, she manages to tell about her
dehumanizing situation by writing and finds hope in act of writing. She takes writing as a means
to define herself against patriarchy. The whole novel is presented in letter writing form; firstly by
Celie to God and then to her sister Nettie and Nettie’s letter to Celie. Writing allows her to
analyze herself. Later, when she knows that God is white man, she stops writing to God and
starts writing to Nettie. Writing appears as a means which empower Celie and she realizes her
'self’. But she develops a sense of self in the company of other woman. The first woman she