Friday, May 17, 2019

Childhood by Alice Walker

In Alice Walkers essay Childhood she tells her daughter or so traditions. Traditions are defined as the handing down of statements, beliefs, legends, customs, information, etc. , from generation to generation, especially by word of lip or by practice. Walker uses the harvest to tell the story of traditions, and how she learned the traditions. She was taught traditions by her family trough their scarper habit.Her family worked on a farm when she was a child, and passed those traditions on to her. Walker uses potatoes as an example of the harvest. She asked her daughter if she knew what potatoes looked equivalent when they were dug out of the ground. Walkers daughter was unsure what the potatoes looked like, so Walker unconquerable she would show her the next morning before heading back to the city. Her daughter thought that watching her stimulate dig the potatoes out of the ground was extraordinary.Then Walker started thinking of her childhood, and the enthusiasm that went along with what she is teaching her daughter. She says When I think of childhood at its best, it is of this magic that I think. She then goes on to talk about(predicate) how amazing her family was by saying Of having a family that daily worked with nature to produce the extraordinary. She puts a bent of emphasis on the word magic and how being in the verdant is magical.I raft fix with Walker when she says that the country is magical because I too am from the country. Being in the city I dont feel as free as I want to. In the country I am able to do more of what I want. In the country, everything is fresher, I can attend the stars, and everyone around me is friendly. I think Walker wants to pass on the traditions that she learned from her family on to her daughter, so she can pass them on to her children.

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