A common bond of struggle links the novels The Color Purple by Alice Walker and The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan. Rape, suicide, death, war, oppression, and racism invade the two novels. In The Color Purple, Celie overcomes racism, violence, and other issues to find dignity and love. In the Joy Luck Club, the daughters struggle for acceptance, love, and happiness. Though the characters endure many hardships they survive not only by not becoming bitter individuals but becoming more whole individuals.
Celie in The Color Purple has struggled since the very beginning because of the poor treatment she has received by men. Being raped by her father Fonso, Celie becomes pregnant and Fonso sells both of the children that she has. Celie promises to protect Nettie, her sister, from Fonso's abuse is the first sign of her taking a stance to prevent the horrors which are occurring in her patriarchal existence. When married her husband Albert just uses her as a slave.
He perceives her as livestock, and denies her not only love but humanity (Hall, 3)
The first night together he raped her. She worked on the farm and put up with his children.
At 14 she writes notes to God on the dehumanizing nature of her existence and the humiliations she has suffered (Kirkpatrick, 846).
Although she totally devalues herself, Celie finds her sister very valuable, worth protecting. Her selflessness and lack of bitterness are evident here. Celie shows resentment and bitterness at the way she has been treated by men. Albert also betrays her by hiding all of the letters from Nettie making Celie believe that her sister is dead. She also feels betrayed by God, who seems to her to have condoned much of the strife in her life.
Celie's life has been one of hopelessness, even longing for death as a relief from life's hardships (Hankinson, 3)
Shug suggests to her that the ultimate goal for people is life giving rather than life
Cited: Hall, James C. "Towards a Map of Mis(sed) Reading: The Presence of Absence in the Color Purple" African American Review (Spring 1992):2-6 Hamiliton, Patricia L. "Feng Shui, Astrology, and the Five Elements: Traditional Chinese Belief in Amy Tan 's the Joy Luck Club" MELUS (Summer 1999):1 Hankinson, Stacie L. "From Monotheism to Pantheism: Liberation from Patriarchy in Alice Walker 's the Color Purple" Midwest Quarterly (Spring 1997): 3 Heung, Marina "Daughter-Text/Mother-Text: Matrilineage in Amy Tan 's Joy Luck Club"Feminist Studies (Fall 1993): 3 Kirkpatrick, D.L. "Alice Walker" 1986. New York, NY: St. Martin 's Press. 846 Schell , Orville "Amy Tan the Joy Luck Club" March 1989. New York: 1989. 92 Tan, Amy. The Joy Luck Club. 1989. New York: G.P. Putnam