Aspects of racism and feminism in Mules and Men By Zora Neale Hurston And The Color Purple by Alice Walker
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
African American literature rose and was brought up in the midst of
controversies, plotting and a jeopardizing policy. It has been written by
African American writers about their issues. It emerged in a time when the
blacks were in need of a means of representation to their pathetic lives. But
this literature did not convey all Africans’ problems since it neglected the
women’s needs and desires. It dealt with men’s issues only; this is why a
new genre of literature called African American female literature was
introduced.
Female African American literature is all literature written by black
African women concerning their own problems and experiences and what
they were going through because being black and female was not an easy
task. So, writers such as Tony Morrison, Lucy Terry, Zora Hurston, Alice
Walker...etc decided to speak up for their rights and choose the pen and
words as their weapon against injustice.
Though Mules and Man and The Color Purple were not published
in the same period, they do share common points that characterize the black
female literature. Zora Neale Hurston and Alice Walker were born in
different time but within the same community and under the same life
condition. Never meeting each other, the two novelists are linked together
and Walker has decided to follow Hurston’s path. Mules and Man 270
pages long published in 1935 by Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960) who was
born in Eatonville Florida and The Color Purple 300 pages long published
in 1982 by Alice Walker born in 1944 in Eatonton Georgia. The two novels
focus upon themes that have a relationship with their society; being a
woman of colour; they are suffering from both oppression and
discrimination; they explore racism and feminism within the black
community and give a truthful image about black characters.