Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Walker, Alice - Linda Selzer (essay date spring 1995)
Walker, Alice - Linda Selzer (essay date spring 1995)
Linda Selzer (essay date spring 1995)
SOURCE: Selzer, Linda. “Race and Domesticity in The Color Purple.” African American Review 29, no. 1 (spring 1995): 67-82.
[In the following essay, Selzer discusses Walker's confrontation of race relations and class distinctions through the underlying text in The Color Purple.]
An important juncture in Alice Walker's The Color Purple is reached when Celie first recovers the missing letters from her long-lost sister Nettie. This discovery not only signals the introduction of a new narrator to this epistolary novel but also begins the transformation of Celie from writer to reader. Indeed, the passage in which Celie struggles to puzzle out the markings on her first envelope from Nettie provides a concrete illustration of both Celie's particular horizon of interpretation and Walker's chosen approach to the epistolary form:
Saturday morning Shug put Nettie letter in my...
[The entire page is 10080 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- M. Teresa Tavormina (essay date fall 1986)
- Daniel W. Ross (essay date spring 1988)
- Wendy Wall (essay date spring 1988)
- Steven C. Weisenburger (essay date fall 1989)
- Priscilla L. Walton (essay date April 1990)
- Charles L. Proudfit (essay date spring 1991)
- Linda Abbandonato (essay date October 1991)
- James C. Hall (essay date spring 1992)
- Carole Anne Taylor (essay date winter 1994)
- Linda Selzer (essay date spring 1995)
- Stacie Lynn Hankinson (essay date spring 1997)
- Charles J. Heglar (essay date winter 2000)
- Martha J. Cutter (essay date fall-winter 2000)
- Robyn R. Warhol (essay date May 2001)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
