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1、學(xué) 號(hào):200994620134HEBEI UNITED UNIVERSITY畢業(yè)論文GRADUATE THESIS論文題目:從紫色中的分析中看黑人女性的自我覺醒學(xué)生姓名:謝冰清專業(yè)班級(jí):09英語3班學(xué) 院:外國語學(xué)院指導(dǎo)教師:李小艷 講師2013年05月21日Self-Consciousness of Black Women in The Color Purple ByXie BingqingA graduate thesissubmitted in partial fulfillment of the requirementsfor the degree of Bachelor of Ar

2、ts to theCollege of Foreign LanguagesHebei United UniversityMay 21st, 2013摘 要摘 要愛麗絲沃克是一位著名的黑人女性作家。紫色是她最著名的作品,自這部作品出版以來引起了很多評(píng)論家和讀者的關(guān)注,因?yàn)檫@部作品不僅涉及了種族歧視的問題,也提及了女權(quán)主義的問題。與其他作家不同的是,愛麗絲沃克不僅是看到了黑人女性的自我覺醒,還關(guān)注了女性之間的友情和黑人女性心中的信仰。本文通過分析紫色,去觀察黑人女性的自我覺醒過程,在種族歧視和男權(quán)主義的雙重壓迫下,女主角西里由忍受到自我認(rèn)識(shí),最后到自我覺醒的精神狀態(tài)的改變,沖破了種族歧視和男權(quán)主義

3、兩道精神枷鎖。本文從心理、社會(huì)、文化、信仰等方面來分析黑人女性如何在她們地位受壓迫的時(shí)代突破雙重枷鎖。西麗的自我覺醒不僅激勵(lì)黑人女性,而且對(duì)當(dāng)今社會(huì)女性也有鼓勵(lì)的作用。本文旨在通過對(duì)紫色的分析,激勵(lì)女性讀者,并讓男性讀者有一個(gè)更正確看待女性地位的態(tài)度。關(guān)鍵詞 紫色;自我覺醒;黑人女性;非洲中心主義-15-ABSTRACTABSTRACTAlice Walker is one of the greatest contemporary Afro-American writers. The Color Purple is the most famous of her works and since

4、it was published, many critics and readers are interested in it, because it talks not only about the racial discrimination but also about the feminism.Different from other authors, Alice Walker not only sees black female awakening, but also pays attention to the friendship between women and black wo

5、mens believes. In this paper, through the analysis of The Color Purple by observing the self-awakening progress of black women in the double oppression of racial discrimination and male chauvinism, the heroine Celie is found to have changed in her mental state from enduring to self-awareness, and fi

6、nally breaking the two mental shackles.This article analyzes how the black women break the double yokes in the era that they are enslaved from psychological, social, cultural and devotional views. Celies self-consciousness encourages not only black women but also modern women. This article aims to s

7、timulate female readers, and gives a correct manner to male readers about the social status of females.Keywords purple;self-consciousness;black woman;African centralismCONTENTSCONTENTS摘 要IAbstractIiChapter 1 Introduction11.1 Introduction of The Color Purple11.2 Introduction of Alice Walker21.3 Impli

8、ed Meaning of Purple2Chapter 2 Double Oppressions Black Women Suffered42.1 Racial Oppression42.2 Sexual Oppression4Chapter 3 CelieS Self-Consciousness63.1 Influence of African Culture63.1.1 African Centralism63.1.2 Influence of African Centralism on Celie73.2 Influence of Other Women in The Color Pu

9、rple83.2.1 Nettie83.2.2 Sofia93.2.3 Shug93.3 Self-Consciousness of Celie10Chapter 4 Conclusion12Bibliography14Acknowledgements15Chapter 1 IntroductionChapter 1 Introduction1.1 Introduction of The Color Purple The Color Purple is the master-piece of Alice Walkers works. Since it was published in 1982

10、; it has become the bestseller and was republished many times in following years. Alice Walker has poured her full sentiment into this work. When being completed, she suddenly thought that it seems all of her beloved have lost in suddenly. In 1983, she was awarded the Pulitzer Literature Prize for T

11、he Color Purple. Then she became the first black woman writer which laid her irreplaceable position in the history of American literature. Nearly a century after Lincoln issued Declaration of Abolitionist; United States separation and discrimination were still strong in the South. Alice Walker was b

12、orn in 1944, a poor black family in Georgia Ethan Dayton, the south of US. The prejudice in society and the poverty of family made her deeply realize the distress of black people. Therefore, each of her literary work displays her struggles for the black, particularly for black women to pursue racial

13、 equality and self-independence. Born in the south, naturally, Alice Walker specially preferred southern literature. As a black woman writer, Alice Walker was actively engaged in the womens movement and became a prominent feminist. Although she was outraged at the injustice for the black woman, she

14、explored shining path unceasingly and helped the other women to loose the oppressions. Walker insisted that black women fight for equality between men and women, the struggle against racial and economic oppression tightly related. She abandoned feminism and replaced it with womanism which is defined

15、 as the person who devoted his life to the realization of all people, including men and women, survival and perfectionism. Alice Walker, the concept of womens liberation is not narrow. She recognized that a black woman was not only the black, but also a woman, a human being. Womens liberation means

16、the emancipation of men, even the liberation of all mankind. These viewpoints were revealed in The Color Purple to the greatest extent. In the novel, Walker, with the most realistic approach, described all unfortunates of the black women in male chauvinism, reflecting the self-consciousness of femal

17、e and the process of improvement of their self-worth. The heroine Celie whom Walker put her heart and soul into shaped, with the desire for life and the pursuit of happiness, became the incarnation of a black woman of a new generational. The Color Purple injects fresh vigor into the development of b

18、lack womens literature and demonstrates the breakthrough of the black literary creation. 1.2 Introduction of Alice WalkerAlice Walker was the eighth and last child of Willie Lee Walker and Minnie Tallulah Grant, two sharecroppers. In the summer of 1952 Walker was blinded in her right eye by a BB gun

19、 pellet and has remained facially disfigured. Despite her partial loss of eyesight, Walker was a diligent student, finishing her classes with top grades. During a trip to Africa before her graduation from college, she discovered her accidental pregnancy and then had an abortion secretly, this sad ex

20、perience made her want to commit suicide at a time. Alice Walker is active in political movements; she participated in the Civil Rights Movement when she was a student in Spellman College in Atlanta. She wrote articles, went to speeches, and even marched on Washington to listen to Martin Luther King

21、s famous speech, I Have a Dream, with thousands of black people. After the graduation with her BADegree from Sarah Lawrence, Walker found a job in Jackson, Mississippi, and accepted a position with the Legal Defense Fund for the Advancement of Colored People. With the assistance of the activist and

22、lawyer Marian Wright Edelman, Walker did many good deeds for the black. Walker also taught African American women at some famous universities, such as Wellesley, the University of Massachusetts at Boston, Yale and the University of California at Berkeley, and supported antinuclear and environmental

23、causes. During the late sixties and early seventies she published her first novel, The Third Life of George Copeland (1970); her next novel, Meridian (1976), a tale with the background of the Civil Rights, which is generally regarded as one of the best novels during that time. The Temple of My Famil

24、iar (1989) is an ambitious novel recording 500,000 years of human history. In Possessing the Secret of Joy (1992) the male characters contradict their stereotypical roles; they are the cure to Tashas happiness. Walkers latest novel, By the Light of My Fathers Smile (1998), explores the richness and

25、coherence of the alternative cultural experience of sexuality as a celebration of life, as Walker says that it is the triumphant heart, not the conquered heart, that forgives and love are both timeless and beyond time. She had also written three collections of short stories, three collections of ess

26、ays, six volumes of poetry and several childrens books.1.3 Implied Meaning of PurplePurple is regarded as one kind of noble color that the king dresses, symbolizing the sovereignty and honor. Alice Walker borrows purple as the book title, raising kneeling black women up to the level of royalty, and

27、giving them original dignity and social position.In the novel, the author expresses her intention through multiple use of purple. When Celie just arrives at Alberts family, Albert, who Celies husband but she doesnot dare to call his name, complies to buy clothes for her. At that time she has not see

28、n Shug, but she knows Mr. Albert not only likes, but also respects her. Therefore, what Celie first thinks is the purple clothe that Shug liked. This indicated that she imagines obtaining respect and affection of husband like Shug. She looks everywhere of the entire store for purple clothes in vain

29、attempt. This indicated that opportunity not yet mature. She is unable to obtain the dignity. However, the idea that Celie wants to wear the purple clothes reflects her desire to live a happy life. It is this desire that makes her see her own oppressions, and gradually develop to finally recognize t

30、he value of her own existence. But at the end of the novel, after Celies self-consciousness, she decorates her room with purple color, which shows her desire for a happy life, symbolizing the change of her social position as slave and the beginning of her beautiful completed life. Near the end of th

31、e novel, Albert hand-carved a purple frog for Celie, symbolizing that he recognizes Celies dignity and her right of pursuing happiness.This article concentrates on Celies self-consciousness with the background of other black women supporting or influencing her. Walker takes Celie as a representative

32、 of black women, focusing on how Celie becomes self-conscious with the help of other black women.Chapter 2 Double Oppressions Black Women SufferedChapter 2 Double Oppressions Black Women Suffered2.1 Racial OppressionAfrican-American people had suffered racial discrimination for a long time. First, i

33、t was the selling of black people as slaves. Then, they endured slavery itself, being treated like animals. After slavery was abolished, colored people, especially colored women, still had to deal with racial discrimination, demoralization, subjugation and hatred. Black women had to face unbearable

34、odds at obtaining self-assurance.Women were on the social status of oppression and discrimination. The black women even suffered the double oppression of racial and sexual. With the rise of feminist movement, womens status was gradually promoted, and the black women smashed double shackles. In the m

35、id-1950s to the mid-1960s, African Americans initiated the large-scale movement of struggle against discrimination and racial oppression, striving for social situation and social right. Theoretically, the black people should have gotten their freedom at President Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation i

36、n 1863, but the matter still exists. In The Color Purple, which spans the years between the Depression and the beginning of the Civil Right Movement in the early 1960s, Walker expresses the racial oppression of black people, even the black women in details. Sofia is put in prison because of scolding

37、 and beating mayors wife on the street. Although released, she is still work as a servant in white mayors home. She has the same fate with Celie, oppressed by others, but Celie is a slave for black men and she is a servant for white people despite of breaking the male power in black family. In addit

38、ion, the Olinka people who Nettie mentioned in letter escape to a desolated place because the white build roads in their inhabited area, threatened the existing space of the black. When the white mayor saw the black had the automobile, he bought it to her wife, because he does not want to be more ba

39、ckward than the black. Therefore, the black women suffer not only physical torture but also the spirit. Black women in double oppression of slavery indicate the difficulties that they encountered are multiple in the fight against social prejudices.2.2 Sexual OppressionFeminist movement in the sixtie

40、s and seventies of the last century belongs to the second wave of the feminist movement. Womens movement at this stage was characterized by the male-centered criticism and the awakening of female consciousness. Walker created The Color Purple in the late of 1980s. Although the social situation of wo

41、men has been proved after three feminist movements, the sexual discrimination still exists. When more and more women occupied the leading position of government, school and media, men called out in alarm: the hen crowed!The black women, as colored people, were deeply oppressed by men. They are timid

42、 and think that being submissive is the best way to stay alive. Black men poured their complaint on black women, treating them as life tools without respect. Black men trample on them. In The Color Purple, the oppression which the black females received comes from not only the white people with raci

43、al discrimination, but also the black males; not only the society, but also the family. The protagonist of The Color Purple is Celie. She is a fourteen-year-old black girl who is raped by her stepfather when her mother is away and is warned by her father not to tell “anyone but God”. After her mothe

44、rs death, her two children are taken away by her stepfather, and she becomes a slave both physically and sexually to her stepfather. After her stepfather getting tired of her, she is forced to marry a widower Albert. Albert doesnt love Celie at all but needs a servant to cook and clean for him and t

45、ake care of his three children. Celie is still physically and sexually abused by Albert, but she still keeps silent for she thinks that accepting everything silently is the best and the only way to “staying alive”. When she is beaten, she said: “he beats me like he beats the children. Cept he dont n

46、ever beat them.it all I can do not cry, I make myself wood. I say to myself, Celie, you a tree. That is how come I know trees fear man.”(Alice Walker 1982) 22 Her sister Nettie teaches her to fight with them, but Celie answers: “But I dont know how to fight. All I know how to do is stay alive.” (Ali

47、ce Walker 1982) 17 Celie even teaches man to beat the other woman without realizing that she is also a victim. This shows that the male-oriented perspective is deeply rooted in the black community. Meanwhile, it can be seen that men maintain their supremacy and when their male authority is challenge

48、d and threatened, the way they use to solve problems is only violence.In the family of patriarchal domination, obedience is womans virtue. As a weak woman, Celie has grown to be accustomed to the slave status in silence so that she does not dare to go against her husband. Writing letters becomes a w

49、ay to achieve self-awareness as a black woman. Celie lives on the earth just for submissive and enslaved as a cooker, washer, worker, housekeeper and sexual tool. She is poisoned by patriarchal domination so that she thinks being submissive is natural. Chapter 3 Celies Self-consciousnessChapter 3 Ce

50、lies Self-consciousness3.1 Influence of African CultureAlice Walker compares the African, American with the American-African to appeal black people bringing honor of their national culture and abandoning the traditional vulgar customs. Through The Color Purple, Alice Walker develops the female consc

51、iousness, stressing that women and men have equal power. This proves the symbols and significance of black in the white world. Walker thinks that black is the symbol of beauty and nobleness. She says that the genuine black is the blackest person, while the person who is attached to white people and

52、humiliates the compatriot is the black person who has contracted albinism. The Color Purple fully demonstrates the ideology of African centralism and its positive influence in black women of seeking liberation and equality of Black Nationalism.3.1.1 African CentralismAfrican centralism, also known a

53、s Afrocentrism or Afrocentricity, is a cultural ideology, mostly limited to the United States and is dedicated to the history of black people. It is a response to global Eurocentric racist attitudes about African people and their historical contributions, and revisits their history with an African c

54、ultural and ideological focus.African centralism is centered on the belief that one should lives in harmony with nature, and there is an oneness between human and nature. By assimilating the positive elements of African culture, black women have reestablished their identities, enhanced their self-co

55、nsciousness and raised race consciousness, all of which are lost in American society.In the novel, the African tradition is available through Netties letters from Africa. Her letters are largely ethnographic reading of African culture. They broaden our views by describing customs of the Olinka that

56、parallel some found in South Africa. When the first time Nettie sees black Africans, she writes: “They are the blackest people I have ever seen they are so black, Celie, they shine. I felt like I was seen black for the first time. Because the black is so black, the eye is simply dazzled, and then th

57、ere is the shining that seems to come, really, from moonlight, it is so luminous, but their skin glows in the sun.” (Alice Walker 1982) 147Through Netties letters, womens relationship with men, which shows universal oppression, is described. In Olinka, women and their husbands will do anything for e

58、ach other, sharing both gossip and everyday chores. African culture has the effect in the mind of black women.3.1.2 Influence of African Centralism on CelieAfrican centralism is a gleam of light in black womens dark life. Because of the light, black women begin their pursuing of believes, the shape of the God in their mind. Alice Walker does not comply with Christianity blindly. With the developing of Celies character, the author has made her Walker-type graphic solution to Christianity and to God. This subverts the traditional Christian concep

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