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Reading Check and Short Answer Questions on key points are designed for guided reading assignments, in-class review, formative assessment, quizzes, and more.
PART 1
Reading Check
1. Which author does Walker refer to most when she discusses her own model in “Saving the Life that is Your Own”?
2. What staple food item is Walker’s mother in need of in “The Black Writer and the Southern Experience”?
3. At what university does Walker give the commencement address in “A Talk: Convocation 1972”?
4. What is the title of Jean Toomer’s most well-known work?
5. What central term to Walker’s writing does she introduce in her essay “Gifts of Power: The Writings of Rebecca Jackson”?
6. What are the names of the Black women whom Walker refers to as an “unholy trinity” in “Zora Neale Hurston: A Cautionary Tale and a Partisan View”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. In “The Black Writer and the Southern Experience,” which author does Walker compare William Faulkner to and what is the major contrast between them?
2. How is the essay “But Yet and Still the Cotton Gin Kept on Working…” structured, and how does this structure support Walker’s message?
3. What is significant about the construction of Flannery O’Connor’s grandfather’s house, and how does Walker reflect on this detail?
4. What is the name of the novel Walker references in “A Writer Because of, Not in Spite of, Her Children,” and what is Walker’s evaluation of the novel?
5. Where does Walker travel in “Looking for Zora,” and why?
Paired Resource
PART 2
Reading Check
1. What other 1960s movement does Walker reflect on in her essay “The Civil Rights Movement: What Good Was It”?
2. Where did Walker deliver the speech “Choice: A Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.”?
3. Where in Europe was Walker heading to when she first met Coretta Scott King?
4. How old was Walker when she attended the March on Washington?
5. What is Walker’s personal history with Taylor Reese, as mentioned in “Lulls”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Walker remember her time in college, and what did she realize once she left?
2. What is Walker’s general opinion of the novel The Almost Year, and what is her main critique of the novel’s message?
3. Which poet is the focal point of Walker’s essay “Good Morning, Revolution: Uncollected Writings of Social Protest,” and what part of this poet’s legacy does Walker explore?
4. What country does Walker visit in “My Father’s Country is the Poor,” and why did she travel there?
Paired Resource
PART 3
Reading Check
1. Which poetic foremother does Walker use as an example to “provide a backdrop for our mothers’ work” in “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens”?
2. What book of poetry did Walker write during the week after her abortion?
3. What is the nickname of Walker’s childhood friend Cassie Mae Terrell?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What two Black authors does Walker compare to each other in “From an Interview,” and why does she see them as similar?
2. How is Walker forced to confront colorism within her own life, and what does she understand about the nuances of this tension?
3. What ultimately happened to the memo that Walker sent to the editors at the Black Scholar, and why?
4. To what does Walker attribute her ability to understand her father in “Brothers and Sisters,” and why does she come to this conclusion?
Paired Resource
PART 4
Reading Check
1. Why does Walker dislike the term “Civil Rights”?
2. Who wrote the book Nuclear Madness?
3. What is Walker’s daughter’s name?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What were Walker’s worries about her daughter living with her while she wrote The Color Purple, and how were those worries resolved?
2. How does Walker’s family answer her question about if she changed after her eye accident, and what is Walker’s response to their answer?
Paired Resource
“The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House”
Recommended Next Reads
Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
PART 1
Reading Check
1. Zora Neale Hurston (Essay 1)
2. Flour (Essay 2)
3. Sarah Lawrence College (Essay 4)
4. Cane (Essay 6)
5. “Womanist” (Essay 8)
6. Zora Neale Hurston, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday (Essay 9)
Short Answer
1. Walker compares Faulkner to Tolstoy. She says that unlike Tolstoy, Faulkner was not prepared to challenge the world into which he was born; while he may examine his society’s decay, his writing perpetuates social ills like racism. (Essay 2)
2. The essay includes excerpts from Black women’s personal stories; Walker helped encourage these women to tell their stories as part of a teacher training program. These short excerpts help convey the pervasive racism in Mississippi and the similarities in these women’s experiences. (Essay 3)
3. Enslaved people built Flannery O’Connor’s grandfather’s home, and they made the bricks by hand. Walker wonders if any of them were her relatives. (Essay 5)
4. The novel is called Second Class Citizen. Walker feels that it is very important—despite its unremarkable writing style—because it comments on the role of motherhood for the woman artist. (Essay 7)
5. Walker travels to Florida to find Zora Neale Hurston’s burial site. She intends to purchase a headstone for her. (Essay 10)
PART 2
Reading Check
1. The hippie movement (Essay 11)
2. A formerly segregated restaurant in Jackson, Mississippi (Essay 14)
3. Helsinki, Finland (Essay 15)
4. She was around 19 years old and a sophomore in college. (Essay 16)
5. They were engaged. (Essay 19)
Short Answer
1. Walker remembers her time at Sarah Lawrence College fondly: She remembers feeling free to express herself, and she wrote her first published short story there. However, once she left, she realized that her education there was very white-centric and one-sided. (Essay 12)
2. Walker generally likes the novel The Almost Year and calls it “marvelous.” However, she offers the critique that while the Mallory family “shares warmth” with the girl, they are not invested in actually changing society, which is, as Walker says, what the world actually needs. (Essay 13)
3. Walker reflects on the career of Langston Hughes and explores his legacy as a revolutionary poet. (Essay 17)
4. Walker travels to Cuba because she is curious to see the impact that the use of violence in the Cuban Revolution had on the liberated Cuban people. (Essay 20)
PART 3
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. Walker compares Jean Toomer and Zora Neale Hurston because they both allow their characters to be authentically themselves. (Essay 23)
2. Walker has a daughter who is mixed-race and whose skin is lighter than hers. Consequently, Walker’s daughter’s lived experience is not as difficult as Walker’s. Walker understands that she—like her own mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother—has been “subtly programmed” to internalize the concept that lighter is better. (Essay 26)
3. The memo was never published because the editors considered it too “personal” and “hysterical.” Rather than make the requested revisions, Walker withdrew it. (Essay 28)
4. Walker attributes her growing understanding of feminism with her ability to better understand and even forgive her own father. This is because she is able to see her father’s flaws as not just uniquely his, but rather as a reflection of larger societal ills. (Essay 29)
PART 4
Reading Check
1. The term is too bureaucratic and soulless. (Essay 30)
2. Helen Caldicott (Essay 32)
3. Rebecca (Essay 36)
Short Answer
1. Walker was worried that her daughter’s presence may be disruptive to her writing process (or even to the characters themselves), but instead her presence was calming and even helpful. Many of Walker’s characters contain bits and pieces of her daughter’s personality. (Essay 34)
2. Walker’s family said that she did not change after the accident, which Walker finds astounding because she knows how traumatizing and life-altering that accident was for her. (Essay 35)
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By Alice Walker