The story "daily use" shows a variety of views on the identity and heritage of the mother and the two daughters. In "everyday use", Alice Walker uses a descriptive image and a metaphor to tell the reader the importance of heritage. She also showed ways to share some of the life with each generation. The main characters of this story are "mother" and Maggie is "di", which are contradictory views on historical and cultural significance, respectively.
Daily Youth: Introduction "Daily Supplies" was published early as Alice Walker 's author and in 1973 she appeared in her "Love and troubles: Black women' s story" series. This work has been warmly appreciated at the time of publication, "everyday use" has been called short film novel by critics who like Walker. As Walker pointed out by critic Barbara Christian, she clearly states that her sentences have two central themes. The importance of her work ... the theme of making a woman of Southern African-American is itself. Then they handed them to Maggie. And Maggie lit a celebration of her lifelong black women in the southern part of the country.
Comment on the novel by Laura Hillenbrand is not a story but reflection on inspiration and resilience, not a daily recovery power, but an astounding quantum recovery power. The central theme of this review is what quantum resilience can and can happen in everyday life - to make ordinary people surprising and even even to even expect themselves. The second theme is to explore other true spiritual frameworks that are necessary conditions for inspiration and inspiration. Inspired people must somehow experience the source of inspiration as a real others. And the receiver really must be the source of other inspiration
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.