Why The Color Purple (1982) by Alice Walker Continues to Spark Debate and Inspiration

Why The Color Purple (1982) by Alice Walker Continues to Spark Debate and Inspiration

Alice Walker’s The Color Purple (1982) continues to spark debate and inspiration due to its groundbreaking depiction of African American women’s lives in the early 20th century. 

The novel’s unflinching exploration of themes such as racism, sexism, and personal trauma challenged conventional narratives of its time, offering a raw and intimate look at the struggles faced by Black women. 

Walker’s portrayal of Celie’s journey from victimization to empowerment resonates deeply with readers, highlighting the resilience of the human spirit in the face of systemic oppression. This honest representation of abuse and personal growth has both captivated and provoked readers, leading to ongoing discussions about its impact and relevance.

The novel’s controversial elements also contribute to its continued debate. 

Some critics argue that The Color Purple portrays African American life in a manner that perpetuates negative stereotypes, focusing heavily on violence and suffering. 

These concerns have led to discussions about the balance between authentic representation and the potential reinforcement of harmful tropes. Furthermore, Walker’s depiction of complex and sometimes flawed characters has sparked conversations about the ethics of storytelling and the responsibility of authors to their communities. 

These debates underscore the novel’s provocative nature and its role in pushing boundaries within literary and social discourse.

Despite these controversies, The Color Purple remains a source of profound inspiration. Its narrative of overcoming adversity and finding strength in solidarity continues to inspire readers and scholars alike. The novel has empowered countless individuals by validating their experiences and providing a voice to those often marginalized in literature. Its adaptations, including the acclaimed film and stage musical, further extend its influence, proving that Walker’s powerful storytelling transcends the page. 

The ongoing engagement with The Color Purple illustrates its lasting impact as a transformative work that challenges and inspires generations of readers.

INTRODUCTION 

The Color Purple, Alice Walker’s third novel, brought fame and financial success to its author. It also won her considerable praise and attracted criticism for its controversial themes. 

Many reviewers were disturbed by her portrayal of black males, which they found unduly negative. Although she was criticized for presenting male characters in a negative light, Walker was admired for her powerful portraits of black women. 

Reviewers praised her for her use of the epistolary form—the book is composed as a series of letters—and her use of black folk English. Following on from her early political interests as a civil rights worker during the 1960s, many of her social views are expressed in the novel. In The Color Purple, as in her other writings, Walker focuses on the theme of the double repression of black women in America. Walker contends that black women do not only suffer from discrimination by the white community but also from black males. 

As the civil rights movement helped shape Walker’s thinking regarding racial issues in the United States, it also shaped her fascination with Africa. 

During the 1960s, a strong interest in ethnic and racial identity stimulated many African-Americans to look for their roots in Africa. The primary theme of The Color Purple nevertheless reflects Walker’s desire to project a positive outlook on life, even under the harshest conditions. 

Her central character triumphs over adversity and forgives those who oppressed her. This theme of the triumph of good over evil undoubtedly accounts for the book’s popularity among readers.

PLOT SUMMARY 

1.  First Period 

In The Color Purple, the story is told through letters. The only sentences outside the letters are the first two: “You better not never tell nobody but God. It’d kill your mammy.” Silenced forever, the main character, 14-year-old Celie, writes letters to God. Her father has raped her and she has two children, a girl and a boy, whom “Pa” has taken away from her. 

Celie’s mother has died and her father now has his eye on her little sister, Nettie.

Mr. wants to marry Nettie but Pa rejects him because of the scandal about Mr. and Shug Avery, a female blues singer. Celie manages to get a picture of Shug and falls in love with her. Eventually, Mr. agrees to take Celie instead of Nettie because Pa offers him a cow.

Once she is in his care, Mr. beats Celie all the time. Meanwhile, Nettie runs away from Pa and comes to Mr.’s house, but when she rejects his advances, he throws her out. Celie advises Nettie to ask her daughter Olivia’s new “mother” for help. Nettie promises to write but her letters never arrive.

One day, Shug Avery comes to town, but Mr. does not take Celie to see her. Harpo, Mr.’s son, gets married to Sofia, a strong brave woman, and when he complains that Sofia does not obey him, Celie advises Harpo to beat her. Sofia finds out and in the conversation that follows Celie realizes that she is jealous of Sofia: “You do what I can’t. Fight.”

2. Second Period 

Shug is ill and Mr. brings her to his home. To Celie’s surprise, she calls Mr. by his first name, Albert. Celie’s love and care make Shug better; Shug starts composing a new song.

Sofia finally leaves Harpo, who asks Shug to come and sing at his house, which he has turned into a jukebox café (“jukejoint”). Shug invites Celie to the performance. Shug sings “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” and then her new piece called “Celie’s Song”. Celie discovers that she is important to someone.

Before leaving, Shug says she will make sure Mr. never beats Celie again. She also teaches Celie to love herself. By the time Sofia returns with a new man and six children instead of five, Harpo has a little girlfriend he calls Squeak. 

Sofia and Squeak hit each other in the jukejoint and finally, Sofia leaves.

The mayor’s wife sees Sofia in town with the kids and asks Sofia to be her maid. Sofia answers: “Hell no” and hits the mayor when he protests. She is arrested, beaten, and left in prison. Meanwhile, Squeak takes care of Sofia’s children. When she finds out that her white uncle, Tom Hodges, is the officer in charge of the prison, Squeak tries to persuade him to be more lenient towards Sofia. She convinces him that working for the mayor’s wife would be a better punishment for Sofia. 

Hodges forces Squeak to have sex with him. When Squeak goes back home, furious and humiliated, she orders Harpo to call her Mary Agnes, her real name. Sofia starts working for the mayor’s wife, but she is treated as a slave.

On her next visit, Shug is married. She and Celie have missed each other and one night, when the men are away, Celie tells Shug the story of Pa and the children. Shug kisses her and they make love.

3. Third Period 

One day, Shug asks Celie about Nettie and together they realize that Mr. has been hiding Nettie’s letters. They finally recover them from Mr.’s trunk.

Unlike Celie’s letters to God, Nettie’s letters are written in standard English. 

The day Nettie left, Mr. followed her and tried to rape her. She fought and he had to give up, but he promised she would never hear from Celie again. Nettie went to see Corrine, Olivia’s new mother, and her husband, the Reverend Samuel. She also met Celie’s other child, Adam. Samuel was a member of a Missionary Society and Nettie decided to go to Africa with the family. 

First, they went to New York, where Nettie discovered Harlem and African culture. Then, they went to England and Senegal, where Nettie saw what Europe was doing to Africa: robbing its treasures, using its peoples, and impoverishing the land.

Celie reads Nettie’s letters and wants to kill Mr. for having hidden them. To help Celie control herself, Shug suggests that she make herself a pair of pants [trousers] and go on reading the letters.

When the missionary group arrived in Africa, the Olinkas thought Adam and Olivia were Nettie’s and Samuel’s children. They told Nettie the story about roof leaves: there had been a greedy chief who cut down much of the jungle in order to create more farmland. The plants, which provided the leaves for the roofs of the Olinkas’ houses, were destroyed and many people died. The village began worshipping the leaves. 

When Nettie looked at the roof of her new house in the village, she knew she was in front of the Olinkas’ God.

Olinka girls were not educated. Olivia was the only girl at school. Corrine, jealous and worried by the Olinkas’ impressions about her family, asked Nettie to tell the children not to call her Mama. Olivia’s only girlfriend, Tashi, could not come to school because her parents forbade it.

After five years of silence, the next letter tells Celie that Adam and Olivia had discovered connections between slave stories and African stories. Tashi’s father had died and her mother had let her go to school. A road was now near the village and suddenly the Olinkas realized it was going to destroy their sacred place. 

The chief went to the coast to do something about it, but he discovered that the Olinkas’ whole territory now belonged to a rubber company.

When Corrine got ill shortly afterwards, she told Nettie she thought Adam and Olivia were Nettie’s and Samuel’s kids. Though Nettie swore it was not so, Corrine was not convinced. Nettie and Samuel talked about it and Samuel told her that Celie’s and Nettie’s real father was not the man they called “Pa”; their mother had been married before to a man who was lynched by white people. 

In this way, Celie is freed from the nightmare of believing her children are also her brother and sister.

4. Fourth Period 

For the first time, Celie writes a letter to Nettie. 

She has visited her old house with Shug and seen her Pa. Meanwhile, she goes on reading Nettie’s letters.

Nettie and Samuel tried to convince Corrine of the real story of the children. She believed them only when Nettie made her remember meeting Celie in town. Corrine smiled to them then but died soon afterwards.

“I don’t write to God no more, I write to you [Nettie],” says Celie in her next letter. She sees that she has been praying to a white old man. Shug tells Celie she believes God is not a He or a She, but an It. It is everything and It gets very angry if one walks by the colour purple in a field and does not notice it.

Shug and Celie decide to leave Mr. together with Mary Agnes, who wants to be a singer. Celie curses Mr. and tells him that everything he did to her, he did to himself. The two women go to Shug’s house in Memphis. Then, Shug travels around singing and Celie starts Folkspants, Unlimited, a family clothing business.

When Celie goes back home to see Sofia and Harpo, she finds Mr. has changed. He cooks and cleans. Now they can talk. Harpo tells Celie his father could not sleep until he sent Celie the last letters he had kept.

The letters say Nettie and Samuel got married in the middle of the Olinka war. The company destroyed the roof leaves. Some of the Olinkas went to the jungle to search for the mbeles, a legendary tribe. Samuel and Nettie travelled to England and on the journey, Nettie told the children their real story. They were eager to meet Celie, but Adam missed Tashi. 

When they got back to Africa, the Olinkas were so desperate that they had marked their children’s faces to keep their tradition alive. Tashi had the traditional scars on her cheeks.

In the United States, Celie’s stepfather dies and she inherits the house. She cleans it of its horror with a ceremony and sells her pants there. Shug goes back to Memphis. 

Celie is very sad and lonely, and she then hears that the ship Nettie had taken to go home was sunk by the Germans.

But Nettie’s letters keep arriving. Tashi, her mother, and Adam all disappeared from the village. Meanwhile, Mr. and Celie are united through heartbreak and their love for Shug. Celie discovers that Mr. loves to sew. While they work together, she tells him the Olinkas’ version of Adam and Eve’s story: Adam and Eve were the first white babies in a black world, rejected because they were different. The serpent represents black people. 

Whites crush this serpent when they can because they are still enraged. In time, white people will be the new serpent and coloured people will crush them. The only way to stop this horror is to worship the serpent and accept that it is our relative.

In her last letter, Nettie tells Celie that Adam and Tashi went to a secret valley where people from different tribes lived together. 

When they came back, Adam wanted to marry Tashi, but she rejected him. Adam scarred himself to convince her and then they got married.

Sofia starts working in Celie’s store. She is with Harpo again. Mr., who is now called Albert, asks Celie to marry him, but Celie prefers friendship. Shug comes back to them. Celie’s last letter in the book is to God, but this time it is Shug’s God. Celie is happy: Nettie, Samuel, and the children are home at last.

CHARACTERS 

1.  Adam 

Adam is Celie’s son who was adopted by the missionary, Reverend Samuel, and his wife, Corrine. When the Reverend and his family return to the United States, Celie is reunited with her grown son.

2.  Albert 

Albert is the widower with four children who buys Celie from her stepfather. Albert treats Celie cruelly, using her to satisfy his sexual needs and to take care of his children. 

He really loves Shug Avery, who later comes to live with Albert and Celie when she is sick. Celie appreciates Shug’s presence in the house, because Albert treats her better when Shug is around. Later in life, Albert softens and Celie takes him in as a helper in her business.

3.  Albert’s Father 

Albert’s father comes to visit when he hears that Albert has taken Shug Avery into his house. He says nasty things about Shug and expresses his disapproval of what his son is doing. Albert asks him to leave.

4.  Alphonso 

Celie’s stepfather. 

When Celie’s mother is sick and dying, Alphonso rapes Celie and continues to do so until Celie has two children, whom he sells to a local missionary and his wife. He does not tell Celie what has happened to the children and initially Celie thinks that he has killed them. 

Celie later learns that he is not her real father. Her real father was lynched years before by a white mob. Alphonso tells Celie not to tell anyone but God about what he has done to her. He warns her that if she tells, it will kill her mother.

5.  Shug Avery 

Shug, a blues singer, is the woman that Albert loves. 

She is a sophisticated and liberated woman. 

When she comes to stay with Albert and Celie, who care for her while she is sick, she and Celie develop a deep relationship. Shug helps Celie gain self-esteem and teaches her to speak up for herself. She finds the letters from Nettie to Celie that Albert has kept hidden away from Celie for years. Shug also helps Celie get started in her business by encouraging her to sew. 

Later in the story, Shug returns once more to Celie and Albert’s home, but this time with a husband. Along with Sofia and Nettie, Shug is a role model who helps Celie change her life.

6.  Addie Beasley 

Nettie and Celie’s teacher, who recognizes the girls’ intense desire to learn. Their stepfather, Alphonso, is contemptuous of her when she tells him that his daughters are clever.

7.  Carrie 

Carrie is a sister of Albert who comes to visit. She tells Celie that she is a much better housekeeper than Albert’s first wife.

8.  Celie 

Celie is the heroine of the novel. 

Most of the letters that make up the book are written by Celie to God or, after she learns that her sister Nettie is in Africa, to Nettie. 

Celie does not know about Nettie’s attempts to communicate with her until Shug finds the letters from Nettie that Albert has hidden. The author advocates sexual liberation and self-determination for women via the character of Celie. 

Through Celie’s voice, articulated in black folk English, life in the world of a poor, black, rural farming family unfolds. In the beginning of the story, Celie is a young girl who has been raped by her stepfather, who later sells her to Albert as a wife. Both men treat Celie cruelly and with disregard for her needs or feelings. Celie is forbearing and a hard worker, for which everyone praises her. 

When Albert’s mistress Shug comes to live with them, Celie is liberated from her oppression. 

Shug intervenes on her behalf and Celie learns to stand up for herself with Shug’s encouragement.

9.  Corrine 

Corrine is the Reverend Samuel’s wife. Corrine and Samuel are missionaries who adopt Celie’s children. Nettie becomes their helper and the missionaries leave for Africa with Nettie and the children. When Corrine dies in Africa, Nettie marries Samuel. 

She and Samuel, along with their adopted children, Adam and Olivia, return to the United States when war breaks out in Africa. Adam’s African wife Tashi also comes to America with them.

10.  Grady 

Grady is Shug Avery’s husband. She brings Grady to meet Celie and Albert later in the story. Shug and Grady return in a sporty car.

11.  Harpo 

Harpo is Albert’s son. Harpo marries Sofia and they have five children. 

In his relationship with Sofia, Harpo tries to live up to his father’s role as the domineering male. Because Sofia is a strong-willed young woman, she becomes disgusted with the way Harpo treats her and leaves him for a time. When she returns with a boyfriend, Harpo is jealous. Eventually they get back together, but their relationship changes. 

Harpo accepts her strong character and stops trying to dominate her.

12.  Tom Hodges 

Tom Hodges is the officer in charge of the prison where Sofia is sent after she has insulted the mayor’s wife. 

When his niece, Squeak, comes to see him in an effort to get Sofia released from prison, Hodges rapes her. Walker uses this scene to illustrate the mentality of racism in the South during the period of the novel. Hodges is the brother of Squeak’s white father. 

Because his niece is black on her mother’s side, Hodges has no qualms about sexually assaulting her.

13.  Kate 

Kate is one of Albert’s sisters. On one of her visits she tells Albert to buy Celie some clothes.

14.  Mama 

Celie’s mother, who is sickly and dies in the early part of the story. When she refuses to have sex with her husband, Albert, he rapes Celie.

15. Mayor 

The mayor of the town with whom Sofia has a run-in. Sofia is jailed for insulting the mayor and his wife.

16.  Millie 

Millie is the mayor’s wife. 

Sofia insults Millie and is arrested. After serving her sentence, Sofia is freed only to become the live-in carer for Millie’s children.

17.  Nettie 

Nettie is Celie’s younger sister. 

Nettie is saved from a fate like Celie’s because she has been taken in by the Reverend Samuel and his wife Corrine. 

When they leave for Africa on missionary work, Nettie goes with them. Nettie’s letters to Celie are written in standard English to reflect the fact that she has received a better education than Celie. In her letters to Celie, Nettie tells her sister a great deal about Africa, which comes to represent the larger world as well as the African-American ethnic identity in the novel. 

When the Reverend’s wife dies, Nettie marries him. She continues to raise his adopted children—Celie’s children by her stepfather. 

Nettie returns to the United States and reunites Celie with her children.

18.  Odessa 

Odessa is Sofia’s sister. Odessa takes care of Sofia’s children when she is sent to jail.

19.  Olivia 

Olivia is Celie’s daughter by her stepfather. Olivia was adopted by the Reverend Samuel and his wife Corrine, along with her brother Adam, Celie’s other child. Olivia returns to the United States with the Reverend, Nettie, Adam, and his wife, Tashi, and is reunited with Celie, her birth mother.

20.  The Prizefighter 

When Sofia returns home after leaving Harpo for a substantial length of time, she brings a prizefighter with her. He is her boyfriend and she uses him to make Harpo jealous.

21.  Reverend Samuel 

Reverend Samuel is the missionary who adopts Celie’s children from Albert. 

Celie does not know that they have been adopted. She thinks that Albert killed them. The Reverend, his wife, and Nettie, whom they have taken in, leave with the children for Africa to do some missionary work there. 

After the Reverend’s wife dies, he marries Nettie.

22.  Sofia 

Sofia is one of the three major female characters in the story who have a positive influence on Celie. 

Celie sees how Sofia stands up for herself to Harpo and also to the white community. When Sofia becomes disgusted with Harpo’s behaviour towards her, she leaves him for a while. On her return, she taunts him with her new boyfriend, a prizefighter. Eventually, Sofia and Harpo reunite on different terms. 

When she is insulted by the mayor’s wife, she retaliates and causes a scene, for which she is arrested and thrown in jail.

23.  Squeak 

Squeak becomes Harpo’s girlfriend after Sofia leaves him. 

When Sofia returns Squeak is nasty towards her, but Squeak also helps Sofia when she is jailed for standing up for herself after having been insulted by whites. 

When Squeak intercedes for her with her white uncle, Tom Hodges, she is raped by him.

24.  Swain 

Swain is the musician who performs at the jukejoint Harpo has built.

25.  Tashi 

Tashi is Adam’s African wife. She comes to the United States with him and the rest of the missionary family when they leave Africa to escape the hostilities there.

26.  Tobias 

Tobias is Albert’s brother. He comes to visit Shug while she is sick at Albert’s house. He brings chocolate and they socialize while Celie teaches Shug to quilt.

THEMES 

1.  Sexism 

Sexual relations between men and women in The Color Purple is a major theme. 

Alice Walker sets her story of Celie’s transformation from a passive female to an independent woman within the culture of Southern black rural society from the 1920s to the 1940s. In the beginning of the story, Celie is dominated first by her father, whom she later learns is really her stepfather, then by her husband, Albert (Mr.). 

The catalyst for the character change in Celie is the relationship she develops with Shug Avery, her husband Albert’s mistress. Because Celie has been warned by her stepfather, Alphonso, not to tell anyone but God about how he repeatedly rapes her, she begins to write letters to God. 

It is through the letters that the reader develops a sense of Celie’s being, which at first is self-effacing, but eventually becomes strong and independent.

In the novel there are a number of role reversals that take place between men and women. Harpo, Albert’s son, tries to emulate his father and attempts to dominate his strong-willed wife, Sofia. By the end of the story, Harpo and Sofia have reversed traditional male-female roles. Harpo stays at home to take care of the house, while Sofia works. Celie and Albert also reverse roles. By the end of the story, Celie is an independent businesswoman, and Albert is her assistant. Celie has also learned to speak up for herself, claiming her house when her stepfather dies. 

The sexual relationship between Celie and Shug further breaks with the traditional roles of passive women and dominant men. 

In the relationship between Samuel and Corrine, the missionaries who adopt Celie’s children, and later between Nettie and Samuel, Walker presents what could be called a partnership between a man and woman. In these relationships, both the man and the woman share the same goals and work together to realize them. Walker uses the incident between Squeak and her white uncle, the officer at Sofia’s prison, to illustrate how sexism and racism were expressed. 

Hodges has no qualms about raping his own niece, which reflects a Southern, white, male disregard for the dignity of black women. 

During the period of the novel, it was a commonly held view among white males that they could do whatever they pleased with black women, a view that many black males shared as well.

2.  Transformation 

Celie’s transformation from a young passive girl, who is the object of violence and cruelty from her stepfather and her husband, into an independent woman with self-esteem is at the heart of The Color Purple

While the ways in which conflicts are resolved may stretch the imagination at times, they are central to the author’s view that goodness can triumph over evil. 

That Celie is able to forgive Albert by the end of the story and take him in as a helper reflects Walker’s insistence on the redeeming quality of the human heart. 

She shows in transformed relationships that the worst cruelty committed by one person towards another does not prohibit a change of heart. The conditions under which human beings struggle to shape their behaviour. Albert had a difficult life and took out his frustrations on Celie. When Celie became self-sufficient, she could easily have turned her back on Albert, but it is not in her character to be uncharitable. In becoming independent, Celie has found happiness. 

Rejecting Albert would detract from her happiness. Celie’s behaviour towards Albert reflects Walker’s insistence on forgiveness and contributes to the overall religious overtones of the book.

3.  Culture 

Cultural difference plays a significant role in The Color Purple

Walker effectively uses black folk English in Celie’s letters to express the voice of poor, black rural African-Americans. 

Walker presents a clear picture in the book of the economic and social hardships that African-Americans faced in the rural South during the early 20th century. She also presents an honest picture of the effects of racial repression. The picture Walker paints of black life is not one-sided. While Celie and Albert are tied to the land and the harsh life it represents, Nettie escapes into a black middle-class life through her missionary friends. 

Religion in the South played an important role in liberating many African-Americans from poverty. As a spin-off for involvement with the church, literacy and education flourished. Celie is embracing a religious literacy through her letters to God and in her letters to Nettie she comes to grips with the larger world, including Africa, outside her small community. 

By making the connection to Africa, Walker emphasizes the importance of African-Americans’ roots.

LITERARY STYLE

1.  Point of View 

The Color Purple is written in the first person and the voice is predominately Celie’s, but some of the letters that comprise the book are written to Celie by her sister Nettie. 

The story covers 30 years of Celie’s life from childhood to her maturity as an independent woman. By having Celie write in black folk English, Walker brings the reader close to the quality and rhythms of life that her characters experience. Celie’s dialect also reflects her lack of formal education. 

Nettie, who was formally educated, writes her letters in standard English. They are full of information that becomes a source of knowledge for Celie outside the world of her own small community.

2.  Structure 

The structure of The Color Purple is the series of letters Celie writes to God and to her sister Nettie. 

Some of the letters in the book are written by Nettie to Celie. This literary form is called the epistolary novel, a form developed in the 18th century by novelists such as Samuel Richardson. 

A major advantage of this structure is the intimacy it establishes between the reader and the letter-writer. With the epistolary form, Walker was able to focus on the inner life of her main character and create a sense of intimacy. 

In essence, this technique gives the reader the chance to read over the character’s shoulder. Nettie, to a great extent, escaped the cruelty that Celie experienced because she was able to leave home early. The tone of her letters to Celie contrasts sharply with Celie’s letters to God. Nettie’s letters are much less intimate. They do not contain the suffering that Celie has expressed in her letters to God. 

By introducing Nettie’s letters, Walker is able to shift her story from Celie’s life of despair to a life that begins to have hope. It is through the help of Shug Avery that Celie finds her hope—the letters from Nettie that Albert had hidden from her.

The novel has four time frames. In the first period of her life, Celie experiences the misery of poverty and cruelty at the hands of her stepfather. In the second closely related period, Celie experiences continued cruelty from her husband Albert. In the third period, she awakens to the possibility of self-knowledge through her relationship with Shug and her renewed contact with her sister Nettie. Finally, Celie has established control over her own life; she has found the happiness and contentment that come from self-knowledge. 

Another period, not directly a part of Celie’s life, is Nettie’s time spent in Africa. The letters from Nettie serve as a contrast to Celie’s life. 

They also enlarge Celie’s experience and help to give her life a more universal perspective.

3.  Symbolism 

The primary symbol of The Color Purple is found in the book’s title. 

The significance of the colour purple is that it stands for human hope. It is a miraculous colour when found in nature and one that indicates that the feeling of hope, despite misery, is a miracle of the human spirit.

HISTORICAL CONTEXT 

1.  Black-White Relations in the Rural South 

After the abolition of slavery, the social and economic conditions for African-Americans remained much the same. 

While they were no longer slaves, many blacks remained on the land as tenant farmers (“sharecroppers”). They tilled the soil but the land was owned by their former slave masters. After 1915, economic opportunities in the cities of the industrial North encouraged many blacks to leave the South. Those that remained continued to live in isolation from white society. 

Schools and churches were segregated, as well as housing. There were few opportunities for blacks to establish themselves outside of tenant farming. During the period of the novel, segregation between blacks and whites was enforced legally so that blacks had to sit in separate parts of cinemas and drink out of separate water fountains, and were forbidden from eating at white restaurants. 

The laws that were passed to enforce this segregation were called Jim Crow laws, named after a pre-Civil War minstrel character. In The Color Purple Sofia is victimized by this social policy. When she shows defiance to the white mayor’s wife who insults her, she is arrested and given a stiff jail sentence for her actions.

Lynching (generally hanging by a mob) was prevalent in the South from the 1880s to the 1930s. Celie’s real father had been lynched in the 1900s because he had established a business that competed with white businesses. White Southern businessmen felt economically threatened when a black business took black customers from them. 

Retaliation by lynching went unchallenged until the United States Congress tried to pass an anti-lynching law in 1937. Southern senators stopped the bill by not letting it come to a vote in the Senate.

2.  African-American Religion 

In their letters, Celie and Nettie talk about God. Celie confesses that she sees God as white, but Nettie replies that being in Africa has made her see God differently. 

Her African experience has made her see God spiritually rather than in the physical form that is represented in Western Christianity. 

While most African-Americans were either Baptist or Methodist during the first half of the 20th century, the way they expressed their religion in church was very different from white congregations. The services were infused with elements from their African roots, particularly the distinct musical style and emotional delivery of the sermon. 

The congregation answered the preacher at key points in the service and singing was accompanied with expressive physical movements, like clapping and swaying. The main reason why African-Americans were drawn to the Baptist and Methodist churches was that these two denominations had long opposed slavery. By the late 18th century, blacks were forming congregations within these Protestant sects. 

In 1816 religious leaders from the black community met in Philadelphia and established the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), which still has sizable congregations throughout the United States.

ADAPTATION

The Color Purple has since been adapted into multiple forms of media, including a critically acclaimed film in 1985 directed by Steven Spielberg and a Tony Award-winning Broadway musical. Each adaptation has brought new dimensions to the story, but the novel remains the definitive version, known for its emotional depth, vivid characterizations, and unflinching examination of difficult social issues. 

Oprah Winfrey in The Color Purple 1985
Oprah Winfrey in The Color Purple (1985)

Walker’s work earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award, solidifying The Color Purple as a classic that continues to resonate with readers for its powerful message of hope, resilience, and the enduring strength of the human spirit.

 

The Color Purple (2023)

The 2023 movie adaptation of The Color Purple is a reimagining of Alice Walker’s 1982 novel and serves as a cinematic version of the 2005 Broadway musical, rather than a direct remake of the 1985 film. Directed by Blitz Bazawule, known for his work on Black Is King, the film blends the emotional depth of the original novel with the vibrant, musical elements of the stage production. 

Halle Bailey and Phylicia Pearl Mpasi in The Colour Purple (2023) as young Nettie and young Celie
Halle Bailey and Phylicia Pearl Mpasi in The Colour Purple (2023) as young Nettie and young Celie

The adaptation aims to bring a modern interpretation of the story while maintaining the core themes of female empowerment, resilience, and the African American experience in the early 20th century South.

Produced by major industry figures such as Oprah Winfrey, who starred as Sofia in the 1985 adaptation, and Steven Spielberg, who directed the original film, the 2023 version features an all-star cast. 

Fantasia Barrino, who previously played Celie on Broadway, reprises her role for the film, bringing a powerful vocal and emotional performance to the character. Other notable cast members include Taraji P. Henson as Shug Avery, Danielle Brooks as Sofia, and Colman Domingo as Mister. 

This new adaptation has been praised for its casting, with actors who not only bring depth to their roles but also have a strong musical presence.

What sets the 2023 adaptation apart is its focus on musical storytelling, drawing heavily from the Broadway version’s score, which infuses gospel, blues, jazz, and African rhythms. The musical numbers are central to conveying the emotional highs and lows of the story, enhancing the narrative’s emotional impact. 

The combination of Bazawule’s unique visual style and the robust musical performances creates a vibrant, multi-sensory experience that is both faithful to the source material and innovative in its execution.

In terms of themes, the film continues to explore the intersections of race, gender, and personal freedom, much like the original novel. However, with a fresh perspective, it delves deeper into issues of generational trauma, self-love, and identity through a modern lens, making it relevant for contemporary audiences. 

The film emphasizes the importance of community and solidarity among Black women, mirroring current conversations about sisterhood and support networks in the fight against systemic oppression.

Anticipation for the 2023 adaptation was high, with many excited to see how Bazawule’s vision and the musical elements would reintroduce the beloved story to a new generation. 

While it honors the spirit of Alice Walker’s original work, this adaptation is seen as a celebration of Black art, culture, and resilience, combining the power of cinema and music to tell a timeless story of survival, redemption, and love.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alice Walker

 Alice Walker was born in the rural community of Eatonton, Georgia, in 1944. 

Most of Eatonton’s residents were tenant farmers. When she was eight years old, Walker was blinded in one eye when her brother accidentally shot her with an air gun. As a result of her injury, Alice became self-conscious and withdrawn, and spent her time writing poetry. She began her higher education at Spelman College in 1961 but transferred to Sarah Lawrence College in 1963. 

After graduating in 1965, she went to Mississippi to work as a civil rights activist. There she met Melvyn Leventhal, a white civil rights lawyer, whom she married in 1967. The Leventhals were the first legally married interracial couple to live in Jackson, Mississippi. They divorced in 1976. Alice Walker’s first novel (The Third Life of Grange Copeland) was published in 1970 and her second (Meridian) in 1976. Both books dealt with the civil rights movement. 

When The Color Purple was published in 1982 it brought Walker overnight success and recognition as a writer. 

In 1989 Walker published The Temple of My Familiar, in which she used a mythic context as a framework to cover a half million years of human history. In this work, Walker explored the social structure of a matriarchal society and the origins of patriarchal societies. As in her other works, she also explored racial and sexual relationships. 

Walker’s novel, Possessing the Secret of Joy, was published in 1992. Along with novels, Walker has written short stories and books of poetry. Many of her stories have been included in anthologies. An active contributor to periodicals, Walker has had articles published in several magazines, including Harper’s, Negro Digest, Black World, Essence, and the Denver Quarterly

Besides her writing career, Walker has been a teacher of black studies, a writer in residence, and a professor of literature at a number of colleges and universities. She has received numerous awards for her writing, including a National Endowment for the Arts grant, a Guggenheim Award, an O. Henry Award, an American Book Award, and the Pulitzer Prize.

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