Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Sula essays
Sula essays    Toni Morrison's Sula is a novel that has a theme about the nature of evil. The          story follows the lives of two black female friends who present differing views          on evil. On one hand, we have society's conventional view of evil represented          by the character of Nel and also seen in the Bottom's disapproval of Sula.          The other view of evil is seen through the character of Sula and through her          actions, which conflict with traditional society. The friendship of Sula and Nel          is how the author conveys her message about evil in the relationship. In the          relationship the two different conceptions of evil mix and create an essentially          neutral mixture. By looking at Nel's and Sula's friendship and the two          different views of evil that they have, the author shows us the subjective and          relative nature of evil and how friendship can overcome any evil. In the          Bottom, the dominant view of evil is society's conception. Its guidelines for          good and bad behavior can be seen through society's reaction to Sula. Her          return to the Bottom after being gone for ten years is greeted with the same          way one would greet a pest, a plague or an illness. The novel shows society's          negative view of her when it describes how Sula arrived "accompanied by a          plague of robins" (Morrison 89). Her time spent in the Bottom is grouped          with other evils the "floods, white people, tuberculosis, famine and ignorance"          (Morrison 90) and her stay in the town is called the "evil days"(89), because          the town views Sula as an evil force. The reason the town saw her as evil is          because of her sexual habits. Sula herself knows that the townspeople          "despised her and ... framed their hatred as disgust for the easy way she lay          with men"(122), because being faithful in a marriage is one of the town's most          important principles. Even worse is ...     
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