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The Storm

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When reading Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use”, the main theme seems to be contentedness. The antagonist Dee is only content to please herself, which is evident in her demand for the quilts which had been promised to her sister Maggie. Likewise, she is happy only when she feels a deep bond to her roots in African culture, and is willing to change her name and personality so that she may feel a connection with those roots. The protagonist on the other hand is content to spend the rest of her life in the situation she’s been in for probably the majority of it: work (she describes herself as having “man-working hands”). She, unlike her daughter Dee, has little concern for her family’s heritage, seeing it more as something that can be useful to a person than as something that a person should base their whole life on. An example of this is her reaction to Dee’s argument that Maggie will “misuse” the quilts that have been in the family for generations by putting them to “everyday use”. The protagonist is unaffected by this argument, explaining that the quilts were made to be put to everyday use. The point-of-view of this story contributes to the reader’s understanding of the mentality of the protagonist. Written in first-person narration, the story presents the world of a low-class black woman and her perception of that world. She tells of her two daughters, Dee and Maggie. But because she is not omniscient of the thoughts

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