Friday, July 19, 2019
Community and Survival in Sula :: Sula Essays
      Community and Survival in Sula           Sula by Toni Morrison is a very complex novel with many underlying themes.  Some of the themes that exist are good and evil, friendship and love, survival  and community, and death. In Marie Nigro's article, "In Search of Self:  Frustration and Denial in Toni Morrison's Sula" Nigro deals with the themes of  survival and community. According to Nigro, "Sula celebrates many lives: It is  the story of the friendship of two African-American women; it is the story of  growing up black and female; but most of all, it is the story of a community"  (1). Sula contains so many important themes that it is hard to say which one is  the most important. I agree with Marie Nigro when she says that Sula is a story  about community. I believe that community and how the community of Bottom  survives is an important theme of the story. But I do not believe that it is a  central theme of the story. When I think back on the novel Sula in twenty years,  I will remember the relationship and friendship betw   een Nel and Sula. I will not  remember the dynamics of the community.           One of Nigro's main points of her article is how Morrison shows how important  work is to the community of Bottom in order to survive. Nigro believes that work  is important in Sula because it helps define or not define such as in Sula's  case, who the characters are. Nigro argues that the people of Bottom take  survival serious because they live in a white male, world. The residents of  Bottom do their best by working odd jobs and scrimping and helping each other  when in need (2). But they know that they will always have to remain within the  boundaries of the hostile white world (2). According to Nigro, survival is also  very important for Eva and Hannah. They know they do not have much opportunity  being black and female, so they prepare for the winter by canning food in the  summer (2). Eva definitely knows how serious survival is because she goes to the  extreme of cutting off her own leg (2). Jude is another character, Nigro points  out, that needs work.  					    
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