In "everyday use", Alice Walker tells a story about the mother and two daughters' identities and contradictory views about their ancestors. Mother is a simple woman who emphasizes the usefulness of culture and heritage, but it also has its own personal significance. But her daughter Dee represents a materialistic lifestyle and cultures and heritage can only be evaluated for its artistic appeal. Walker showed that Mama's view on her two daughters changed the importance of how they viewed the heritage.
Alice Walker of the short story "daily use" is, says it contradiction of the identity and heritage of between mother and daughter. Johnson Mrs. is uneducated woman to tell the story of the day when her daughter Dee visited the university. Mrs. Johnson insisted that it was "a slender and rough lady" (180, Walker). In contrast to her automatic explanation, she explained Dee as a young lady with light skin color, beautiful hair and whole body, "I want to be beautiful." (181, Walker)
Everyday use: Abstract Alice Walker's contemporary classic "daily necessities" is the story of a mother and her two daughters about their identity and contradictory views of their ancestors. My mother talked about her daughter who was visiting Dee from the university. And because they had some heirloom quilts, they collided with another daughter, Maggie. The story begins with a narrator, her daughter Dee, a "thin woman with rude, working people" waiting for the return of an educated woman living in the city. Her companion is a shy girl who regards her little girl, Maggie, her sister as a mixture of awkwardness and awe. While they are waiting, the talker reveals details of family history, especially the relationship between her two girls. When I was a child, the first house was destroyed by a fire, and serious scars remained in Maggie's arms and legs.
Daily life is a story about the family going home, and dynamics between three women provides a drama of many stories. That narrator, Mama is waiting for De to return while reflecting her daughter and their growing environment. Di is a harder child, but her mother loves her. Maggie is scarred, but he is very concerned and respects her family and tradition. Mama believes that family relations will not go away, even if Dee was fired for her childhood and direct lineage. Named after the long list of Dees, Wangero rejects her date of birth as a symbol of her family's rejection - even if this rejection leads to a greater history. But for Mama and Maggie the people you come in and the people you ask are more important than the legacy you read in the book. My mother's family is full of drama and history, complexity, and contradiction, just like any other family member.