She moves away from Bottom, has numerous affairs with many men, and when she returns, she is recognized as evil. Sula is called a "roach" (112) and a "*****" (112). Her death is a welcome relief in Bottom. Her affair with Nel's husband does make matters any better. All of this makes Nel look almost like an angel in comparison. Sula did not live a nice, neat little life. Unlike Nel, she did not marry and have children and she did not regret it. She was pessimistic and sarcastic while Nel was controlling and composed. However, do these facts make perception real? Barbara Lounsberry does not think so. In fact, she writes that Morrison "uses the lives of the major character in Sula to demonstrate both the variety and futlity of human attempts to order and contain experience" (Lounsberry). As we see, perspective is everything but perspectives can be wrong. It takes death to reveal the truth behind everything. When Nel goes to see Sula on her deathbed, she is lead there from her sense of duty. Sula asks Nel how she knows if she was the good one. The visit with Eva also plants doubt in Nel's mind. When she realizes that she enjoyed watching Chicken Little fall deep into the water more than Sula did (for Sula was terrified), she understands that Sula was the good one. Her psychic break allows the truth to set in. Nel's tears at the end of the novel reinforce her loss and her realization that sometimes good...
Throughout the novel, Sula is the character that is flawed and imperfect. In comparison to Nel, Sula is messed up and there is no hope because Sula herself does not think there is any. While Sula does nothing to counteract her bad label, it becomes apparent that maybe she did not deserve it. Nel found it too easy to blame Sula because she was the one that held the boy's hands. The town found it too easy to hate Sula because she was not like one of them and she defied convention. These behaviors reinforce society's need to find a victim. Sula was the victim her entire life but, in the end, she was more true to herself than Nel because she lived life on her own terms. She lived the best life she could while Nel lived according to what society dictated. Nel's life by all accounts was "good" but as revealed in Sula, "good" and "evil" are terms we should never take for granted.Initially St. Augustine favoured the dualistic view that evil was external and separate from the world and mankind that in evident from the Manichean worldview. However, he was later to reject this strict dualism and taker another view of the nature of evil. This was more Platonic and was based on the writings of Plotinus and Porphyry. This refers to the view that evil is a measure and result of
As it is typical in good vs. evil combats, the forces of good are initially shown powerless, with no one to help them and with no thought on how to remedy the situation they find themselves in. The Pevensies themselves are unable to reach Caspian and the rest of the Narnians because they constantly come across impediments. The overall purpose of the heroes in this book is to return purity
Conception of the Good One of the most critical and central aspects to human activity has presumably been the search for a good life and happiness. In attempts to understand and explain the quest for a good life and happiness, various philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Augustine have tried to explain the conception of good. Most of these philosophers have carried out their work in Athens, which is a great
Good Man is Hard to Find For the purposes of this essay, I chose Flannery O'Connor's short story "A Good Man is Hard to Find." "A Good Man is Had to Find" is an apt topic for research such as this, because the ambiguity of the story's position regarding a grandmother ultimately responsible for the death of her entire family leads to a wide variety of possible readings, each with
Quality of Evil in Young Goodman Brown and Ethan Brand When examining the works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, it is interesting to note the role of evil or indeed perceived evil. Evil appears to distort lives and destroy egoistical souls. One such egoistical soul was Young Goodman Brown (Hawthorne 1937). He leaves his wife Faith in complete trust that her name adequately describes her nature. The end of the story however
Problem of Evil Evil has always been with humanity. From the first man that walked upon the earth up to the present day, evil has been part of life. The purpose of this paper is to show that evil is everywhere, and that, while good is also in abundant supply, evil will never totally be removed from society. The two are part of an alignment of forces; they compliment each other,
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