Epilogue
Before starting the project, I didn't know anything about Alice Walker. I thought it was a complicated thing to do. But everything changed when I finished to do my project. Researching about Alice Walker was one of the best experience I've had writting. Because my high school was an all girls school, I learned that everything men can do, we can do it better and Alice Walker is an example of this. Not only she is a great author but she is a person we can admire. Walker has worked to address problems of injustice, inequality, and poverty as an activist, teacher, and public intellectual. Many of her works have the idea of reformation, the sense of hope even in despair, is at the core of Walker's vision. In spite of the brutal effects of sexism and racism suffered by the characters of her short stories and novels. Walker is a unique author and also, a unique person. From growing up poor in the segregated south and losing part of her vision in a childhood accident, to receiving threats from the Ku Klux Klan for her interracial marriage and work with the NAACP in 1960s Mississippi, Walker has experienced her share of hardships.
But over the years she has channeled these experiences into groundbreaking fiction about the lives of blacks in America, becoming one of the most celebrated writers of her time. Through her continued dedication to writing and politics she remains a powerful example of what it means to lead a purposeful life.
But over the years she has channeled these experiences into groundbreaking fiction about the lives of blacks in America, becoming one of the most celebrated writers of her time. Through her continued dedication to writing and politics she remains a powerful example of what it means to lead a purposeful life.