Please read the phrases of Slat Morrison's novel slur carefully from the community name on the top of the mountain called "top" to the "paradoxical" family filled with contradictions. There is no obvious difference in this novel. This is the most obvious in terms of the relationship between the two main characters, Slara and Nell. They have different characteristics, but they also have many similarities. Literary critics explain these girls in several different ways. As a lesbian (Smith 8), half as a person (Coleman 145), and as a manifestation of good and evil dichotomies (Bergenholtz 4 of 9).
Jessica Gardiner ENGL 4020S October 2, 2014 Dr. Gould February 2014: Toni Morrison, Sula's idea of breaking: Tauri Morrison's Sula's psychological point of view Tula Morrison's Sula and each of the other fictitious novels Understanding and Explaining the Role When analyzing the causal literature behind psychological thinking, the reader must adopt African-American critical theory. In the critical theory of African Americans, expectations for black psychology and gender psychology are demanding that they are too high before they are disappointed. The situation is different in the novel and pop culture demo, but my personal theme is the same. Love is blind and painful. Nair learned this lesson at Sula. She can not control the fate of her marriage. Nail lost contact with the reality of life other than marriage. When marriage is over, she leaves nothing, just as there is a charity group after her relationship is over. It's not
Please read the phrases of Slat Morrison's novel slur carefully from the community name on the top of the mountain called "top" to the "paradoxical" family filled with contradictions. There is no obvious difference in this novel. This is the most obvious in terms of the relationship between the two main characters, Slara and Nell. They have different characteristics, but they also have many similarities. - Sura's identity struggle Toni Morrison's novel "Sula" is an illustration of a new feminist literature painted on "Medusa's Laughter" by Helene Cixous, as it finally depicts the two main characters, Nel and Sula. However, throughout the novel, it is clearly shown that the explanation of Cixous, Gilbert and Gubar's female characters is clear in this novel. Paradoxically, the image of a traditional obedient woman is for a new woman in the whole novel.