The Color Purple by Alice Walker: Flash summaries - Flash summaries

The Color Purple by Alice Walker: Flash summaries

By Flash summaries

  • Release Date: 2015-06-24
  • Genre: Study Aids

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Description

Get a summary of The Color Purple by Alice Walker you can trust - in a flash.

Flash Summaries implements proven techniques to help save time and retain key points and themes. Whether you're needing a quick refresher or deciding on your next read, Flash Summaries is a summary you can trust. 

• Time Saving Techniques 
We utilize techniques taken by multilateral industries to condense information concisely down to its essentials. Grab details of importance at a glance. 

• Multi-Point Quality Inspection 
Multiple quality checkpoint inspections are performed along the way to ensure every summary is the highest caliber on the market. Buy with confidence and enjoy incredible prices lower than ever before. 

• Editor's Notes 
A most useful feature and like having a guide by your side, learn from and be taught along the way. We walk you through the book to highlight what is important and notable through our Editor's Notes.* 

• Designed with Book Clubs and Groups in Mind 
Not only meant for individuals, but book clubs and groups can also benefit from using Flash Summaries as a tool to share with others. Add to the conversation with group oriented questions to bring hot and notable topics to surface. 

Preview Summary: 
Celie suffers from physical, verbal, and sexual abuse from the man she believes to be her father, Alphonso. She gets pregnant and both her children are taken away from her by Alphonso. When she marries Mister, the abuse continues. Mister continually abuses her, making her meek and weak. She has little self-worth and has nobody to run to. Her only friend at this point, Nettie, her younger sister, is separated from her after Mister kicksNettie out of the house. Celie doesn’t know her whereabouts. 

Editor’s Notes: 
This gives us a picture of how most women are treated during the early quarter of the 1900s. This depicts how macho and patriarchal society is during that period. It also explains and shapes the character of the protagonist, Celie. This justifies why the novel is written in a letter form and why it is mostly addressed to God. In the beginning of the book, Alphonso warns Celie to tell no one but God. So she starts to write and confides her plight to God...

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