Sunday, March 17, 2019
Mama Day by Gloria Naylor :: Mama Day Gloria Naylor Literature Essays
mamma Day by Gloria NaylorMama Day by Gloria Naylor is a fantastic novel filled with vivid imagery and thought-provoking characters. Naylor weaves a realistic tale, despite the fantastic events that she describes. Her characters are believable and tolerate like real people. However, Naylors greatest asset is her descriptive powers, which not only sets the scene, but enraptures readers into burnt umbers dual worlds of New York City and willow Springs, imprisoning us with her words. The plot centers around the three main characters Ophelia/Cocoa/Baby Girl, George and Mama Day. Mama Day is by far the most dominant personality, although we are not inside her mind the same way we are with Cocoa and George. Mama Day represents the power and resilience of nature and the t letship of willow Springs itself. She seems to literally be upholding the town, and to be so indispensable, I wonder what the town will do when she is gone, left with only Dr. Buzzard as the occupant medicine man. B ut Mama Day seems to have no aspiration of leaving anytime soon. Naylor enhances the connection of Mama Day with nature by associating her with internal imagery. We always see Mama Day in her gardens, or the forest, nursing the land with her skill. She has a connection to nature, and can understand it, as seen by her prediction of the storm. Mama Day represents the last vestiges of the power of the African prudent woman, a single-valued function that is dying step forward as society becomes to a greater extent and more urban. Cocoa straddles the worlds of nature and the city. Her roots are in Willow Springs and she cannot forget that. However, we can never see her taking up the role of wise woman after Mama Day is gone. She has been too changed by the city and its disappointments and heartaches. This division causes much of the conflict between her and George, since she often lashes out when her soul is divided. George Andrews represents, of course, the world of the city. He c annot accept Mama Days primal power, and loses his career for his lack of belief. His angry retaliation at the helpless chickens represents the urban judgement of attempting to control nature. George tries to control something he cant understand, and thus pays the consequences. Each character is associated with their own imagery and language. When each of them speaks, it is with their own unique dialect.
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