Quilting Essay

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    Use of Lucifer in Quilting    Lucifer is the epitome and personification of all that is evil according to the traditional American perspective. His name has been linked with the name Satan so that either name refers to "the Devil" in most of the western Christian tradition. American culture, with its Puritan roots and Fundamentalist influences, has cast Lucifer in the role of the eternal enemy of all that we hold to be good and worthwhile. Preachers and others who teach Christian morality

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    What are trifles? In Susan Glaspell’s play, Trifles, we look at a murder case that happens in an isolated farmhouse. Mr. Wright has been murdered while he was asleep. Someone has a strung a rope around his neck. That someone is Mrs. Wright. Trifles illustrates that men have substantially more power than women. They first start by going in to the kitchen. Everyone observes the kitchen to see that it is a mess. The men leaves the room. The ladies wonder about the kitchen. Mrs. Wright requested that

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    Symbols In Trifles

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    particular pattern, but her husband would consider it as a trifle, just something that concerned women. After being arrested for the questioning of her husband’s death, her two friends took the quilt to her to finish, she could only do it by two ways- quilting or knotting it. The male officers asked the women how she would finish it and both women confidently answered “knot it.” As the male officers only viewed the quilt as being a trifle as well, they were blind by the evidence that was right before their

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    Characterization is considered to be an element of literature. Analyzing characterization is the key to finding a fictional story’s theme, and it is made known through direct and indirect characterization. Direct characterization tells the personality or traits of the character, while indirect presents the character by their actions. Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” is a short story that reveals its theme through characterization and used by exposing the characters values, heritage, and insecurities

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    finished with the abusive treatment from her husband that eventually drives her mad and we see that through the quilt. Minnie had decided when quilting how she was going to kill him by tying a knot around his neck. The two women know this verdict, yet continue to ignore it. Mrs. Hale actually starts to fix the odd patches. They give excuses for the bad quilting so that they can protect Minnie. Mrs. Hale keeps a calm demeanor and insists that Minnie was maybe just

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    evokes the same feeling of unity, but for different reasons. The quilt is symbolic of an awareness of AIDS. Likewise, the quilt demonstrates the empathy Aunt Ida shares for the many families who have lost a loved one from this illness. Aunt Ida’s quilting is not for display, it is to keep a person warm (45). The warmth Aunt Ida tries to expresses is not only literal but metaphorical. The quilt is to wrap the families with the strength and warmness these families needs at this time. In the same manner

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    In Everyday Use Historical Criticisms explores the disconnection that people can sometimes have depending on their education. Alice Walker successfully shows the disconnection by comparing two ends of the spectrum of generation. Taking the historical context it plays a major role in the way this short story is viewed. It was a time where people of color had a different and difficult experience getting an education. When the narrator was talking about having an education it was important because she

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    Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” is a short story included in her collection In Love and Trouble published in 1973. The story’s setting takes place in the Deep South during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s as many “blacks” were struggling to define their cultural identities (White). Traditions and culture in “Everyday Use” is portrayed contrastingly between Ms. Johnson and Maggie, who still follow rural black cultural of the south and Dee who has newly adopted a “native African” culture. An encounter

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    s last straw was when John killed her bird. When the bird died, so did Minnie?s personality. After that murder, Minnie was enraged, confused, and didn?t know what to do. Mrs. Hale wondered ?if she was goin? to quilt it or knot it?(840). By quilting the blanket, she would have chosen to endure the pain that John was putting her through, but by knotting the quilt she chose to eliminate it. Just as a knot represents a finishing or a completion of a project, it also was an end to John. The

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    Quilt Definition

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    the home, which reminds me of my family’s comfort, care and affection. Henceforth, Home is an objectified as a metaphorical embodiment of memory and relationships with my family (Morley, 2000) Home as a place of feminine of comfort and care Quilting has been a kind of litmus test of traditional femininity that has been practiced by generations of Chinese women to gift quilt to their daughters or granddaughters as an object that signifies home, so my grandmother sewn a personalised quilt for

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