Everyday Use
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“Everyday Use” by Alice Walker, is a story of a black family composed of a mother and her two daughters: Maggie and Dee. Walker does an excellent job illustrating her characters. There are all types of characters in this short story from round to static. Dee is a flat character, yet Walker uses Dees character to warn people of what might happen if they do not live properly. Walker describes Dees character as arrogant and selfish, and through Dees character one is allowed to perceive the wicked affect of an egotistical world.
Dee is portrayed as a light-skinned black person who feels as though she is better than everyone else because her waist is small, her skin is light, she has a nice grade of hair, and she is somewhat educated. Dee believes she is too good for her family, and she is in a hurry to get out of the country to a more suitable life style. She wrote to her mother saying “no matter where we choose to live, she [Dee] will manage to come see us. But she will never bring her friends”(Walker 92). It is apparent that Dee is ashamed of her family, and what they represent. However, Dees character is allowed to slightly change throughout the story. She says she will never bring any of her friends home, yet when she arrives at the house she is accompanied by a gentleman. She also went from denying her upbringing to wanting to take a piece of it back to the city with her in order to show off where she came from. Dee tells her mother and Maggie that they do not understand their heritage, because they plan to put “priceless” heirloom quilts to “everyday use”(Walker 96). Dee does not truly value the heritage, and her interest in the quilts seem to reflect a cultural trend. This cultural trend becomes evident when the mother says, “I had offered Dee a quilt when she went away to college. Then she had told me they were old-fashioned, out of style”(Walker 96). We learned early in the story that Dee acquired a style at a young age, and she allowed the world around her to alter and manipulate that style.
Dee believes she is more cultured than her family. She may have more knowledge about different cultures and religions that she learned in school, but she does not know as much about the family heritage as she thinks she does. For example, when Dee changes her name to “Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo” she destroys