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The Meaning And Maintenance Of Heritage In Alice Walker's Everyday Use

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The Meaning and Maintenance of Heritage in Alice Walker's Everyday Use
In Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use,” Walker uses, the symbolic significance of the quilt in this story to represent the heritage of this family as their heritage signifies where they came from and their traditions and cultural values. Walker demonstrates, that the importance of the quilt was to display the family’s history from generation to generation in hopes that each would understand and appreciate their family's background. For instance, the character Dee who misinterprets her family’s background as well her own self-identification, fails to embrace the importance and value of the quilt that was handmade with pieces of fabric from each significant family member who …show more content…

The narrator's oldest daughter, Dee, thinks heritage is a thing of the past - something that should be framed or placed on the wall, to be viewed as an artistic piece of art the will reminder of her family heritage. Walker clearly illustrates Dee's interpretation of family heritage as one of misperception (Hoel, 1).
Early on in this story walker displays how Dee and Maggie differently view their heritage. For instance, once the family's house burned down, Maggie was severely affected by the tragedy of not only losing the very home she grew up in but her self-confidence as well due to the scars she obtained to her body from the fire. The narrator pronounces, that Dee did not embrace any meaning to the home she had grew up in. Walker implicates, that within her misperception about her heritage, it was just a house to her in no way associated to the family’s heritage at all (Walker, 1).
Another illustration, walker gives of Dee's misperception about her own African-American heritage is voiced when she proclaims to her mother and sister that she has changed her name to "Wangero." When her mother inquiries about the change to her name, Dee says, "I couldn't bear it any longer being named after the people who oppress me" (Walker, 3). According the narrator Mama, the name Dee has been in the family subsequently before the Civil War and

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