Monday, April 13, 2020
Sula Essays - Sula, Booby, , Term Papers, Research Papers
  Sula    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.    Nel is rational and balanced; she gets married and gives in to conformity  and the town's expectations. Sula is an irrational and transient character.    She follows her immediate passions, completely unaware of the feelings  other people might have. However, Nel and Sula are able to function well  only when they are together because they complete each other as opposites.    However, as separate entities, Sula and Nel are vulnerable and isolated  from the rest of world; Sula because she is impulsive and disregards the  feelings of other people, and Nel because she overlooks her own.    The personalities of Nel and Sula form  as a result of their childhood family atmosphere. Sula's unusual exorbitance  results from an eccentric upbringing that openly accepts and welcomes transience.    The narrator describes Sula's house as a "throbbing disorder constantly  awry with things, people, voices and the slamming of doors . . ." (52),  which suggests a family accustomed to spontaneous disruptions and fleeting  alliances. Sula decides that "sex is pleasant and frequent, but otherwise  insignificant." (44) Sula grows up in the atmosphere of an emotional separation  between mothers and daughters in her family. The mothers provide only the  physical maternal support but lack in the emotional attachment to their  children. Sula overhears her mother, Hannah, say, "I love her [Sula]. I  just don't like her, that's the thing." (57) Hannah's words act as a determiner  of Sula's defiance. Hannah and Eva, her mother, are also alienated. "Under    Eva's distant eye, and prey to her idiosyncrasies, her own children grew  up steadily." (41) This dissatisfaction causes Hannah to ask Eva, "Did  you ever love us?" (67) "I know you fed us and all. I was talking 'bout  something else. Did you ever, you know play with us?" (68) Eva leaps out  of the window to "cover her daughter's body with her own" (75) to save  her from a fire; she raises her children single-handedly and even sacrifices  her leg to get an insurance because she does not have enough money to feed  her children. Proud of keeping her children alive through the roughest  times, Eva does not realize that she needs to be more than a physical caretaker.    An unrestricted household such as the Peace family, with little emotional  attachment and moral responsibilities, causes Sula to become impetuous  and independent.    Nel's household, however, is very conformist  and proper, but also lacks in emotional attachments. Nel's parents marry  out of convenience, rather than love. For Nel's mother, the absences of  her husband, a sailor were "quite bearable." Nel is raised in an atmosphere  of "oppressive neatness" (29), a strict and organized household that instills  society's rules in her. Nel's mother constantly attempts to destroy Nel's  spirit and imagination. "Under Helene's [Nel's mother's] hand the girl  became obedient and polite. Any enthusiasms that little Nel showed were  calmed by the mother until she drove her daughter's imagination underground."  (18) "Don't just sit there, honey, you could be pulling your nose" (28)    This emotional vacuum compels the girls to seek their missing components  in each other's company.    During their friendship, Sula and Nel do  not have the feeling of detachment they acquire after their parting. In  their friendship as girls, they "had clung to [each other] as the closest  thing to both an other and a self" (119). They have an interest and curiosity  in life and they are absorbed by everything they do. Together they can  relate to other people better when they are together. "Humor returned.    Nel's love for Jude, which over the years had spun a steady gray web around  her heart, became a bright and easy affection." (95) When they are together,  their characters balance out to make a complete, fulfilled, and self-contained  person, a duet (97). To Nel, Sula's return to Medallion is like "getting  the use of an eye back, getting a cataract removed" (95). Sula's thoughtlessness,  irrationality, and transience are rounded out by Nel's sobriety, solicitude,  and commitment to people and things. "[Sula and Nel] found relief in each  other's personality. Nel seemed stronger and more consistent than Sula,  who could hardly be counted on sustaining any emotion for more than three  minutes." (53) Their friendship was based on sharing, not dividing, as  they "shared the affection of other people". However, when Sula leaves    Medallion and Nel gets married, their separation causes each to become  vulnerable and lonely.    Sula is alienated from other people, and  does not    
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