WELCOME STUDENTS!

This is a place for us to discuss openly and honestly the literature we are reading. Here we are all just communicating our thoughts on what we are reading. There are no right and wrong answers. However, you are expected to be polite, mature, and on topic.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Summer Blog #7: "Quality..."

We have talked about the power and influence that Miss Emma has in driving the plot of this novel. Tante Lou and Vivian also present themselves as strong women. Cite a passage about either Tante Lou or Vivian that you found especially important in understanding the power of women. Explain what this passage reveals. (The deadline to post a response to this post is midnight, June 30, 2011.)

3 comments:

Melinda P said...

The last paragraph in chapter 29 is very important in showing the power of women. Reverend Ambrose tells Jefferson how his aunt has been lying to him by telling Jefferson she was all right when he was in college. However, Tante Lou was not all right. Her hands bled from picking cotton, she had blisters from the hoe and the cane knife, and she was at church crying on her knees. This passage shows Jefferson how much his aunt sacraficed for him so that he could go to college. This passage aslo reveals that women are willing to sacrafice things for the people they love.

branden said...

In chapter 26, when Grant was in Vivian's house, Vivian would not speak to Grant very much after the fight. Vivian's lack of conversation and then her "What is love?" question startled Grant. Grant decided that he would leave that night because of their argument about what love is. However, in the end Grant decided that Vivian's love is the only thing he cared for at that time. This chapter shows how the power of a woman's love trumps almost all of a man's other wants, and the author reveals that love is the reason people can hold themselves together.

Mallory P said...

In chapter 21, Vivian shows that she wants to make an effort to get Grant's aunt and Miss Emma to like her. She does this by choosing to stay and talk with them instead of going home. This decision shows that Vivian is willing to do anything for Grant, even make his family and friends like her. This shows how women are willing to make their own choices and make sacrafices for the people they love.