Autobiography in the Fiction of Alice Walker
[2024-01-17 10:27:55]
While reading Alice Walker's "Purple" and "Daily Supply" it is clear that she will use her allegory to explain her life. Alice Walker talked about her life through her childhood episode, observation of patriarchy in African-American culture, and her rebellion against the society she lived through her story. Alice Walker grew up in a loving family during the year the Great Depression ended. Despite her family's poverty, her strengths and prospects are rich, and she teaches her heritage and life to Walker.
Alice · Marsenia · Walker (1944-) Novelist, poet, short story, literary critic, children novelist, editor, educator known for deep accounts of racial discrimination and gender inequality, South, American Culture and tradition, Alice Walker won international recognition and popular praise at the 1983 novel "Color / Purple", and she received the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. Walker has also published numerous poems, short stories, novels for children, essays. "Our black female writer knows very well that our survival depends on trust," Walker explained in Black Women's writer (1983) of Claudia Tate. Alice Marsenia Walker was born in Eatonton, Georgia on February 9, 1944 and was the eighth daughter of Minnie's tenant Willie Lee Walker. Tallula walker, part-time domestic
Alice Walker is one of the most famous American writers, award-winning novels, stories, prose and poetry writers. In 1983, Walker became the first African-American woman who won the Pulitzer Prize in the novel and her novel "Purple Purple" won the National Book Award. Her other books include the third life of Grunge Copland, the meridian, the temple where I am familiar, and the secret of joy. In her public life, Walker is committed to solving the problems of inequity, inequality, and poverty as activists, teachers, and public intellectuals.