Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Walker, Alice (Vol. 103) - Robert James Butler (essay date Summer 1993)
Walker, Alice (Vol. 103) - Robert James Butler (essay date Summer 1993)
Robert James Butler (essay date Summer 1993)
SOURCE: "Alice Walker's Vision of the South in The Third Life of Grange Copeland," in African American Review, Vol. 27, No. 2, Summer, 1993, pp. 192-204.
[In the following essay, Butler discusses Walker's complicated portrayal of the South in The Third Life of Grange Copeland, in which she uses each life to show a different aspect of the South.]
Two-heading was dying out, he lamented. "Folks what can look at things in more than one way is done got rare."
In "The Black Writer and the Southern Experience," Alice Walker defines her response to the South in a richly ambivalent way. Although she stresses that she does not intend to "romanticize Southern black country life" and is quick to point out that she "hated" the South, "generally," when growing up in rural Georgia, she nevertheless emphasizes that Southern black writers have "enormous richness...
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Criticism
- Barbara Christian (essay date March/April 1981)
- David Bradley (essay date 8 January 1984)
- Alma S. Freeman (essay date Spring 1985)
- Philip M. Royster (essay date Winter 1986)
- Barbara T. Christian (essay date 1986)
- Susan Willis (essay date 1987)
- J. Charles Washington (essay date Spring 1988)
- Alice Hall Petry (essay date Winter 1989)
- Robert James Butler (essay date Summer 1993)
- Judy Mann (review date 16 January 1994)
- Victoria A. Brownworth (review date September-October 1994)
- Tobe Levin (review date Fall 1994)
- Claire Messud (review date 11 November 1994)
- Alyson R. Buckman (essay date Summer 1995)
- Francine Prose (review date 2 January 1996)
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