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Juxtaposition In Sula

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Sula 1. "Not the town, of course, but that part of town where Negroes lived, the part they called the Bottom in spite of the fact that it was up in the hills. (4)" Paradox: The Bottom is actually up in hills, and is predominately where former slaves reside. Slave farmers tricked their former slaves telling them that they would give them farm land, not wanting to give away any of the fertile land, farmers gave them the barren land in the hills. They called this land the bottom because it's in the hills and therefore at the "bottom of Heavan." These lands made the people that resided there unfruitful and unable to provide as much as the whites down in the valleys. 2. "Is? My baby? Burning? (48)" Juxtaposition: Eva, while attempting to sound …show more content…

"She thought she liked the sootiness of sex and it's comedy; she laughed a great deal during the raucous beginnings, and rejected those lovers who regarded sex as healthy or beautiful. (122)" Motif: Sex is the one thing that broke Nel and Sula up. Sula, being free spirited, believed that there was nothing wrong with having multiple partners, while Nel thought of sex as a precious thing that she shared with her husband. Nel is hurt that Sula slept with Jude, and is shocked by Sula's answer of "just because." From Sula's perspective, Nel and Sula were the best of friends that could share anything, even men, while Nel believed if Sula really did care, why would she hurt her like that? 8. "At Eva's house there were four dead robins on the walk. Sula stopped and with her toe pushed them into the bordering grass. (91)" Symbolism: The four dead robins symbolize the four people that died in Eva's house, Eva, Plum, Hannah, and Sula. The deaths of all those characters were caused by one another. Sula caused Hannah's and Eva's, and Eva caused Plum's. The four dead robins follow the "plague" of the robins, and represents the four that died. Although two deaths had already taken place, the dead birds are still a bad omen of

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