He became a drug addict who steals and lies. Eva had gone into his room one night only to find him in a trance. She held him in her arms and said her last good-byes. She then pours kerosene on him and lights him on fire. After the death of her favorite child, Plum, she stops going downstairs. Sula's mother, Hannah, is a deeply sensual woman who sleeps with all the men in The Bottom. The women in the community like Hannah, for she is not. She does not want to possess their husbands but only to sleep with them. Sula overheard her mother saying that she does not like her. Sula, however, does not feel close to her mother and views her in detachment. Therefore, on the same day, Sula and Nel were playing with a little boy named Chicken Little down by the river. Sula was holding him by his hands and swinging him around. However, she loses her grip, and the young boy falls in the water and does not come up. Not knowing where to turn, Sula goes to Shadrack's cabin for help, but Shadrack did not want to help them. So, they both decided not to tell what had happened. Nel assures Sula that it was just an accident, but Sula feels terrible. During Chicken Little's emotional funeral, which had left the two girls changed forever, were numb and silent.
The setting of this novel takes place in a well-known area known as "The Bottom" between the years of 1917-1965. The Bottom is mostly a black community in Ohio, situated in the hills above the mostly white, wealthier community of Medallion. The Bottom first became a community when a slave owner promised his slave freedom and a piece of rich bottomland in exchange for some difficult work. The slave did the work and got his freedom; however the slave-owner played a trick on him in regard to the land. He gave the freed slave land at the top of a hill, rather than in the rich bottomland that is good for farming. Convincing the slave that the land was worthwhile by claiming that it was hilly, the master gave the former slave a poor stretch of hilly land saying it was closer to heaven.
Sula by Toni Morrison Toni Morrison's Sula is a novel that has a theme about the nature of evil. ... She is especially offended by Sula's behavior, because Sula sleeps with her husband. ... Nel's outrage at Sula's actions is similar to the town's anger at Sula and we see the personal hurt that Sula's inconsiderate actions have caused. ... Nel had just gotten married, while Sula left for the city. ... Ignoring her opinion about Sula's actions with Jude, she longs for the Sula saying, "We was girls together. ...
Nel and Sula as a Dual Self In her novel, Sula, Toni Morrison uses the archetype of the dual self through the friendship of Sula and Nel: the two characters are a part of each other. ... Sula blamed herself fully for Chicken Little's accident and Nel made no attempt to change Sula's thinking. ... Sula's motive for sleeping with Jude can be explained because Nel was Sula's other half. ... Sula is very attached to Nel. ... After Sula's death, in a sense, Nel "woke up". ...
Sula "Sula" by Tony Morrison is the story of a friendship between Nel Wright and Sula Peace, who are opposites in the way of relating to other people, to the world around them, and to themselves. ... Sula is an irrational and transient character. ... Sula overhears her mother, Hannah, say, "I love her [Sula]. ... She loses her true unique self after Sula is gone. ... Nel is Sula's connection to other people, while Sula is Nel's connection to herself. ...
In "Sula," Toni Morrison gives us two such individuals, Nel and Sula. ... (p.29) Nel is confined, Sula is free. ... Nel was as wild and excited as Sula was. ... Nel and Sula would not speak again until three years later when Sula was on her deathbed. ... Nel and Sula gain a b...
The novel Sula written by Toni Morrison is structured around the development of friendship. ... Sula grows up feeling very excluded, guilty and very much unloved. ... Sula in the novel, only cross this line two different time. ... After encountering all the episodes Sula had in the community and having her friendship with Nel fail; the single most important person in her life, Sula feels totally isolated. ... Nel on the other hand is the very direct opposite of Sula. ...
This is the meaning of friendship, a theme central to Sula. ... From Sula, the book, we learn the importance of friendship, the pain of betrayal, and the pain of loss. ... From Sula, we watch the girls, Nel and Sula throughout their friendship. ... Take sleeping with your best friend's husband for example, that one act, committed out of ignorance on Sula's part of Nel's feelings. Sula did not realize how she would hurt Nel, by sleeping with Jude. ...
Toni Morrison's Sula chronicles the unlikely friendship of two very different women. ... Like 1965, Sula represents anti-conservativism. ... For Sula, the marriage vow is not sacred. ... Sula refuses society's interpellation of her. ... In very much the same sense, Sula does the same thing. ...
In the end, Sula dies alone in her bed. ... A perfect example is Sula's grandmother Eva. ... Sula acted like anyone would expect. ... Sula may have thrown him, but Nel's apathy was far more evil than Sula's accident. ... (Sula)" "Did he see?...