Samadrita's Reviews > The Color Purple
The Color Purple
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Samadrita's review
bookshelves: 1001-and-more, feminism-feminist-undertones, racism-slavery-post-colonial, in-by-about-america, pulitzer, by-women-who-matter, disturbia, lgbt, cherished, adoration, real-issues-fake-people, amazing-characterization, national-book-award, social-justice, pg-woes
Jul 21, 2013
bookshelves: 1001-and-more, feminism-feminist-undertones, racism-slavery-post-colonial, in-by-about-america, pulitzer, by-women-who-matter, disturbia, lgbt, cherished, adoration, real-issues-fake-people, amazing-characterization, national-book-award, social-justice, pg-woes
I give this book 5 stars to spite the myopic and the V.S. Naipauls of the world who think books written by women are irrelevant. I give this 5 stars to make up for the many 1/2/3 star ratings it may receive simply because of Alice Walker's forthright, honest portrayal of unpleasant truths that are often conveniently shoved under the carpet so as not to disturb the carefully preserved but brittle structure of dogma and century-old misconceptions.
And I award this 5 stars, symbolically on Banned Books Week as an apology for all the cowardly sentiments of the ones who misuse their power by banning books, thereby shutting out many powerful voices which demand and need to be heard.
In my eyes, an author's merit lies not only in their sense of aesthetic beauty, but also in the scope and reach of their worldviews which must reflect in their craft.
Alice Walker's is the voice of one such African American writer that recounts a story which not only breaches the boundaries of an issue like emancipation of women but tries to detect a common pattern in problems plaguing civilizations across continents. She gives us one horrifying glimpse after another into the lives of women ravaged by unspeakable brutalities like rape and abuse, lives searching for meaning and connection and seeking out that elusive ray of hope amidst the darkness of despair.
And by the end of the narrative, she brings to light with great sensitivity, that misogyny, sexism and blind patriarchal prejudices are as rampantly in vogue in the urban, upscale sphere of American cities as they are in the intractable, untameable African landscapes.
Celie and Nettie. Shug Avery, Sofia and Mary Agnes. Tashi and Olivia.
All these are but different names and many facets of the same disturbing reality.
If the lives of Celie and Nettie are torn apart by sexual abuse and humiliation from childhood, then Tashi and other unnamed young African girls of the Olinka tribe are victims of genital mutilation and other forms of psychological and physical torture.
If the men of African American families dehumanize the female members to the point of treating them as mere care-givers and sex slaves, then the objectification of African women by the men of their families is no less appalling. And contrary to accepted beliefs, white families in America are just as easily susceptible to misogyny as the African American families are.
But Alice Walker doesn't only stop at opening our eyes to the uncivilized aspects of our so-called civilized world, but also shows us how knowledge of the world and people at large, self-awareness and education can help exorcize such social evils, how it is never too late to gain a fresh perspective, start anew and how empowerment of women eventually empowers society.
Dear David Gilmour, if I were a professor of English literature I'd have taught Alice Walker to my students without a shred of hesitation, because here's an author who may not possess the trademark sophistication of Virginia Woolf's lyrical prose but who, nonetheless, fearlessly broaches subjects many masters and mistresses of the craft may balk at dealing with.
Alice Walker: 5 | David Gilmour: 0
And I award this 5 stars, symbolically on Banned Books Week as an apology for all the cowardly sentiments of the ones who misuse their power by banning books, thereby shutting out many powerful voices which demand and need to be heard.
In my eyes, an author's merit lies not only in their sense of aesthetic beauty, but also in the scope and reach of their worldviews which must reflect in their craft.
Alice Walker's is the voice of one such African American writer that recounts a story which not only breaches the boundaries of an issue like emancipation of women but tries to detect a common pattern in problems plaguing civilizations across continents. She gives us one horrifying glimpse after another into the lives of women ravaged by unspeakable brutalities like rape and abuse, lives searching for meaning and connection and seeking out that elusive ray of hope amidst the darkness of despair.
And by the end of the narrative, she brings to light with great sensitivity, that misogyny, sexism and blind patriarchal prejudices are as rampantly in vogue in the urban, upscale sphere of American cities as they are in the intractable, untameable African landscapes.
Celie and Nettie. Shug Avery, Sofia and Mary Agnes. Tashi and Olivia.
All these are but different names and many facets of the same disturbing reality.
If the lives of Celie and Nettie are torn apart by sexual abuse and humiliation from childhood, then Tashi and other unnamed young African girls of the Olinka tribe are victims of genital mutilation and other forms of psychological and physical torture.
If the men of African American families dehumanize the female members to the point of treating them as mere care-givers and sex slaves, then the objectification of African women by the men of their families is no less appalling. And contrary to accepted beliefs, white families in America are just as easily susceptible to misogyny as the African American families are.
But Alice Walker doesn't only stop at opening our eyes to the uncivilized aspects of our so-called civilized world, but also shows us how knowledge of the world and people at large, self-awareness and education can help exorcize such social evils, how it is never too late to gain a fresh perspective, start anew and how empowerment of women eventually empowers society.
Dear David Gilmour, if I were a professor of English literature I'd have taught Alice Walker to my students without a shred of hesitation, because here's an author who may not possess the trademark sophistication of Virginia Woolf's lyrical prose but who, nonetheless, fearlessly broaches subjects many masters and mistresses of the craft may balk at dealing with.
Alice Walker: 5 | David Gilmour: 0
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Reading Progress
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
July 21, 2013
– Shelved
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
1001-and-more
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
feminism-feminist-undertones
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
racism-slavery-post-colonial
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
in-by-about-america
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
pulitzer
July 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
by-women-who-matter
September 26, 2013
–
Started Reading
September 26, 2013
– Shelved as:
disturbia
September 27, 2013
– Shelved as:
lgbt
September 28, 2013
–
42.0%
"'Hard times' is a phrase the English love to use, when speaking of Africa. And it is easy to forget that Africa's 'hard times' were made harder by them."
September 28, 2013
–
100.0%
September 29, 2013
– Shelved as:
cherished
September 29, 2013
– Shelved as:
adoration
September 29, 2013
– Shelved as:
real-issues-fake-people
September 29, 2013
–
Finished Reading
October 5, 2013
– Shelved as:
amazing-characterization
August 3, 2014
– Shelved as:
national-book-award
August 26, 2014
– Shelved as:
social-justice
October 5, 2015
– Shelved as:
pg-woes
Comments Showing 1-50 of 89 (89 new)


You have excelled yourself with this explicit but poignant review. I feel as if you are Alice Walker in yourself as you stand up personally for your views and beliefs in life. You're prepared to take the consequences. Also, you're not afraid to be honest and that to me is the most remarkable trait that a human being can possibly have.
Bravo!


@Caro:- Thank you for reading.
@Praj:-Thank you as always. Yes this is exactly what is happening on GR. Unpleasant truths are deliberately being overlooked simply because they may adversely impact Amazon sales. Banning books is the most cowardly thing ever.
Check out this poster on Banned Books-



Lovely review, Samadrita... How come I have not read this yet?

@Lynne:-Thank you as ever for this kind comment. Coming from an honest and forthright person such as yourself I can only take this as a compliment. And I will always stand by what I believe.
@Garima:-Yes we're not going to be told what to read and what not to read. I think you should take some time off books focusing on abuse after Beloved. Gosh but I really need to read another Toni Morrison or maybe a Zora Neale Hurston or Maya Angelou. Hmm we'll see. I am going to consciously read more female authors from now on. Thank you as ever for the kind comment.

@Erwin:-I am so glad there are inspirational teachers like you, Erwin. Your students are lucky.
@Kall:- Actually there has been a brouhaha over this David Gilmour person quite recently (Moira and Aubrey know more about it) who is an author and English professor at the University of Toronto. Here is an excerpt from his recent interview which has led to a huge controversy -
"I’m not interested in teaching books by women. Virginia Woolf is the only writer that interests me as a woman writer, so I do teach one of her short stories. But once again, when I was given this job I said I would only teach the people that I truly, truly love. Unfortunately, none of those happen to be Chinese, or women. Except for Virginia Woolf. And when I tried to teach Virginia Woolf, she’s too sophisticated, even for a third-year class. Usually at the beginning of the semester a hand shoots up and someone asks why there aren’t any women writers in the course. I say I don’t love women writers enough to teach them, if you want women writers go down the hall. What I teach is guys. Serious heterosexual guys. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chekhov, Tolstoy. Real guy-guys. Henry Miller. Philip Roth."
Will look forward to your own experiences with the book.

Thank you as ever, Diane. I love the honesty in your reviews and comments.

I give you 5 stars for this articulate and erudite review, Samadrita. 5 stars for its tone, 5 stars for its content and 5 stars for its overflowing talent. Maybe you could send it to Gilmour, he might change his views about women's capacity to write.

And he gave Pink Floyd's Gilmour a bad name..arghh!
ETA: Beloved...yes...you n Dolors are responsible for making me cry :(


Agreed wholeheartedly!

@Garima:- If anyone's responsible for all our tears, then it's the one and only Toni Morrison. That woman KNOWS how to write! (Not much of a Pink Floyd fan here)
@Jonathan:- I already am! :)
@Rowena:- Thank you as ever, Rowena. I have not but I intend to read more of her works. But first I need to read Maya Angelou and Zora Neale Hurston. I hope to read at least the latter sometime before the year ends.

I think this comment should be flagged as per the new GR policy, as it is attacking David Gilmour. However, I cannot do it, since I wholly endorse the attack.

Do read Angelou's memoirs, they're beautiful - especially All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes



@Erwin:-I am so glad there are inspirational teachers like you, Erwin. Your students are lucky.
@Kall:- Actually there has been a brouhaha..."
Thank you, Samadrita. I can only hope my pupils are as inspired by my teaching as I am by your wonderful reviews.

And he gave Pink Floyd's Gilmour a bad name..arghh!
ETA: Beloved...yes...you n Dolors are responsible for mak..."
Garima, I can't wait to read your review of Beloved. Isn't Morrison's voice powerful? I read and I felt like she was throwing punches at my stomach...

@Lit Bug:- Thanks as ever. Yes I intend to read her memoirs soon, starting with I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.
@Rakhi:-Succinctly put, Rakhi. Now if only the David Gilmours of the world had this basic understanding. Thanks as ever.
@Brian:-Thank you and calling Gilmour a clown is so apt. I don't believe 'guy-guys' can be a part of somebody's vocabulary other than a clown's.
@Erwin:-Thank you for saying such nice things as always and I am happy to have such wonderful human beings such as yourself as my GR friends.
@Dolors:-Gosh I felt that too. Reading Beloved causes physical pain.

It's disappointing that Mr. Gilmour is uninterested in literature that illuminates points of views outside his experience.

David Gilmour's great. As the perfect straw man. Misrepresentation of the opponent's position completely unnecessary! It's not every day you get someone that easy to utilize in valid arguments in such a vitrolic manner.

I am not really aware of Naipaul's misogynistic views (what did he say? I remember Girish Karnad's tirade against him for being anti-Islamist at last year's Mumbai Lit Fest though) but I was appalled to hear David Gilmour's views on female authors. What's more shocking is that the guy is actually in a pedagogic position to influence future generations with his own narrow-minded opinions. Really deplorable.
Good work. :)

David Gilmour'..."
Aubrey, I also read the article Samadrita linked to. I don't know about his credentials, but the comments he made on women authors were pretty sexist and objectionable. In my opinion, of course.

This guy, whoever he is, is clearly homophobic as well - not just misogynist. And homophobia is as much criminal in nature as misogyny or androgyny.
And so is saying "I haven’t encountered any Canadian writers yet that I love enough to teach."
"I’m 63 now" - Gilmour, I'm waiting for you to die.

OMG! Death threat against an author! Where are the GR minions?

@Abhinav:- Naipaul said some hateful things about Jane Austen and that no woman writer in history is his equal. Talk about an ego the size of Antarctica. Read . Look forward to knowing about your experiences with this book.
@Nandakishore:- Sir, I think she was just being sarcastic.
@Lit Bug:- He IS a homophobe, clearly. Ironically though he adores Proust. And I'd rather he lived and made more atrocious remarks for me to use in a review bashing him. I clearly enjoyed it.

I totally wasn't. I meant it.

I totally wasn't. I meant it."
Haha that doesn't bode well for David Gilmour but I didn't mean you, Lit. I meant what Aubrey said. Aubrey was being sarcastic with that straw man comment of hers I think.

Good review as always, Samadrita."
Thanks, Veeral. Naipaul is good fodder for my misogynist-writer bashing soul.

Have you bashed him on GR? If so, tell me, so that I can flag you. ;)

Have you bashed him on GR? If so, tell me, so that I can flag you. ;)"
Flag away.

I'm in awe of the narrow-mindedness and pettiness of that Gilmour guy, I hope he is fired after these statements. He seems to be so stupidly egotistic that he can't even keep his mouth shut.
I incidentally stumbled upon a writer who also teaches, and here is his copy of Flannery O’Connor's 'A Good Man is Hard to Find':
http://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_...
This is so much better!


Honestly, I wondered if his comments were a deliberate attempt to gain notoriety. Statistics show that negative attention sells more books, and look how many of us here now know his name who didn't before.

Colour Purple already occupies my tbr, you remind to get to it with your erudite, clear and evocative voice... as always, Samadrita :)


@Deepthi:- Thank you. I hope to know about your experiences with this one when you do get to read it.
@Miriam:-I know. But then all of us have resolved never to buy or read his books in this lifetime. So I don't think this is helping him.
@Tej:-Thank you for your wonderful comments as ever. You are very right. David Gilmour is just one name among many others. Here's to hoping we can get over silly prejudices and staunch patriarchal values.
@Zanna:-She is my hero for sure. I haven't seen the film yet but hope to see it in the future.

I am going to read this book soon.