Preview

There's No Place Like Home

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
819 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
There's No Place Like Home
Numerous modern literary works rely on setting to ignite the plot and enhance the readability of a story. Oftentimes an author incorporates his own opinions and perspective into his literature to better portray the experiences of his characters. The interpretation and comprehension of a story is largely dependent on the inclusion of accounts from the author 's own life and experiences. In Sue Monk Kidd 's The Secret Life of Bees, David Guterson 's Snow Falling on Cedars, and Jhumpa Lahiri 's Interpreter of Maladies, diaspora makes it difficult for the characters to assimilate to the new customs and moral convictions of each new environment. In her novel, The Secret Life of Bees, Sue Monk Kidd uses her own childhood to mold the story of her main character, Lily. The South Carolina setting is a direct parallel of the Georgian town in which Kidd spent her youth. The racial issues that the story revolves around play a major role in the morals that both Lily and Kidd adopt. The 1960 's story is mainly occupied by underlying themes of racism and feminism typical of that time period. This novel in particular seems especially reliant on the setting to drive the plot. Without Rosaleen 's initial encounter with the "superior" white men to catalyze the novel, Lily 's opportune relocation would not be possible. The overwhelmingly religious population, the dry and dusty roads, and the endless rows of peaches could only be found in the Deep South that Kidd portrays so well. It is also interesting how Lily 's own diaspora reflects the actions of the bees that she cares for. Her first real inclination to leave home is provoked by a voice in her head that, as she watches the bees crawling from captivity, tells her, "Lily Melissa Owens, your jar is open. In a matter of seconds [she] knew exactly what [she] had to do–leave" (Kidd 41). Unlike the unpleasant displacements that Lahiri 's and Guterson 's characters undergo, Lily 's diaspora is voluntary. (Sue Monk) David

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In Sue Monk Kidd’s The Secret Life of Bees, August acts as the unorthodox religious leader of the Daughters of Mary and contributes to Lily’s character and growth. August proves to be a leader, and a positive influence towards Lily in every action she performs. She welcomes Lily, a white girl, into her house during the 1960s, a time when racial segregation was prominent. By doing so, August goes against the popular social views, and jeopardizes her reputation for Lily. August teaches Lily many life lessons such as love, hope, and the importance of religion. Because of August, Lily becomes stronger, and more aware of the society in which she lives in.…

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In The Secret Life of Bees Lily, the protagonist deals with an unsettling amount of inevitable parental conflicts. In the beginning of the novel, Lily runs away from home to escape a abusive father who constantly mistreated her, to find a way to discover the true meaning behind her mothers death. The author makes parental conflict a trouble for Lily throughout the whole novel. Lily has the guilt of believing she accidentally killed her own mother. She is sourced of the information considering her deceased mother, given to her by August and T-Ray, her feeling of being unwanted, and her feeling of the need to feel the love of a family.…

    • 304 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sue M. Kidd grew up in 1964 where prejudice and discrimination was still in full effect, in “The Secret life of Bees” a New York Times bestseller and major picture movie was written it had a lot of influences from her adolescents. Sue M. Kidd explains to the reader the reasoning for her naming the book “The Secret Life of Bees’ was because she practically lived with Bees when she was younger, the honey would ooze out from the walls onto the floor. “The Secret Life of Bees” was published on November 8Th,2001 and the major picture movie was released on October 17th, 2008. Sue M Kidd uses many literary devices throughout the book, in fact it is an expended metaphor describing how the Bees illustrates who Lily (the main character) is and what…

    • 1010 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Secet Life of Bees

    • 2200 Words
    • 9 Pages

    chapter so that the reader can understand the was Lily feels using the bees in the quote…

    • 2200 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Melissa Owens Quotes

    • 3751 Words
    • 16 Pages

    Lily is a fourteen-year-old girl whose mother died when she was four years old, an accident that Lily feels she was responsible for. She dresses in clothes she made in home economics. She is not a popular person in school. She has jet-black hair that resembles a nest of cowlicks, no chin, Sophia Loren eyes and an inferiority complex. She takes to picking scabs on her body and biting the flesh around her fingernails until they bleed. Boys, even the hard-up ones, ignore her. Rosaleen makes Lily wear breeches in the cold, which are neither fashionable nor complimentary, especially under her dresses. Girls become quiet when she walks past, because she has no fashion…

    • 3751 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lily starts catching bees in the jar, even though Rosaleen tells her that she is not going to care if Lily comes crying to her about getting stung. Lily thinks about the time Rosaleen bought her a baby chick and argued with T. Ray to let…

    • 5592 Words
    • 23 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ‘Goodbye,’ I said, and there was a tiny spring of sadness pushing up from my heart.” Lily is aware that all of her memories are in that house and her town, but she takes the risk of never returning again to help the people she loves. This is a true act of heroism taking risks for the people who mean the most to you. In The Secret Life of Bees women are made to think that they are inferior to men and that men hold all the power. Lily’s father T-Ray treated women very unequally and often said that women had less opportunities and were not able to do all the things that men can do. Growing up her whole life with only T-Ray and no mother-figure has left Lily to believe that women really are inferior and not as capable as men. After meeting the daughters of Mary Lily started to no longer underestimate the power of women as she saw the example of Mary, who was a women that was able to do remarkable things. She also learns the power of women by meeting the boatwright sisters who are all remarkably strong. All the women in The Secret Life of Bees are inner heros in their own way and they all show the true…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonny And Kany Comparison

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd and Rocket Boys by Homer (Sonny) Hickam Jr., the protagonists, Lily and Sonny, respectively, both learned that they had the power to escape their seemingly predetermined and immutable fates and to decide their futures for themselves. After her mother died in a tragic gun accident when she was four, Lily Owens was left in the hands of her unloving father, T-Ray, and her colored stand-in mother, Rosaleen, feeling as if she does not fit in because she had no mother figure, not “a grandmother, or even a measly aunt” in her life (Kidd 9). Instead of staying with her father, where she would have endured abuse and neglect for the rest of her life, Lily took the reigns on her future and decided that her and Rosaleen would flee to Tiburon, South Carolina, a town written on the back of one of her mother’s belongings, in hopes of…

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Secret Life of Bees is a novel written by Sue Monk Kidd that was published in 2001. It is about a girl named Lily who runs away from home with her maid Rosaleen. They wanted to get away from danger and racism. In the house, Lily finds out secrets about her dead mother and tries to learn more about her. The story shows a lot of cruelty. When an author uses their writing to represent cruelty in a story, it can be helpful in contributing to the overall theme or message. The cruelty that occurs in the story is racism, and it helps develop the theme of anyone can overlook stereotypes. In the book cruelty is shown when the three men are harassing Rosaleen on her way to register to vote, and when Lily was afraid to tell anyone that she and…

    • 537 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Her abusive father blames Lily for the death of her mother, not that he seems to care much about it, just enough to point fingers. After an incident involving her African-American care-taker forces Lily to run, she searches for any little traces of her mother she can possibly find. Her search brings her to the Boatright sisters, where she finds a home, answers, and more of motherly figures then she would have if her mother hadn't died.The Secret Life of Bees is a coming of age fiction novel written by Sue Monk Kidd. The story is set in the early to mid 1960s where plaid mid thigh kilts and cashmere twinsets were in style, not that Lily Owens had ever been able to experience this fashion statement due to her fathers strict ways. Lily starts in Sylvan, South Carolina, but in her search for her mother she moves the story along to Tiburon, South Carolina. The books mood is serious, due to death, injury, and other hard circumstances. Lily fights through these rough circumstances making the mood of the book also inspirational. The main lesson learned is said by a character named August whom employs Lily “Most people don't have any idea about all the complicated life going on inside hive. Bees have a secret life we don't know anything about.” This goes along with the famous quote “don’t judge a book by its cover”, because you cant always see whats going on inside a persons…

    • 1128 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Secret Life of Bees demonstrates the irrationality of racism by not only portraying black and white characters with dignity and humanity but by also demonstrating how Lily struggles with and ultimately overcomes her own racism. Kidd moves beyond stereotypes to portray whites and blacks with the multifaceted personalities that we find in real life. Lily is not a racist in the same way that the group of men that harass Rosaleen are racist, but she does evidence some prejudice and stereotypes at the start of the novel. She assumes that all African Americans are like Rosaleen, an uneducated laborer-turned-housekeeper. Lily imagines that all African Americans are likewise coarse and uneducated. But when Lily encounters unique, educated, thoughtful August Boatwright, she must change her assumptions and combat her prejudice. At first, Lily feels shocked that a black person could be as smart, sensitive, and creative as August. Recognizing and combating her shock allows Lily to realize the truth about the arbitrariness and irrationality of racism. Like Lily, June must also learn to overcome racial stereotypes. As individuals, humans can display a complex array of personality traits and characteristics, regardless of skin color or ethnicity.…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “People can start out one way, and by the time life gets through with them, they end up completely different” (Kidd 248). During the civil rights era in the book The Secret Life of Bees, teenager Lily escapes her abusive father. She takes her black house maid with her to find answers about her mother, who died when Lily was very young. She leaves T. Ray, her father, and secretly goes to live in a small town of Tiburon, SC with a family of women. These women slowly become her new family with love and patience. Author Sue Monk Kidd uses characters Lily, T. Ray, and June to show that people can be changed by experiences that happen in one’s life, and everyone’s reaction to change varies.…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Racism was a way of life in the South during the time frame of The Secret Life of Bees. At many times in the novel the reader is shown how racism affects each character in the novel. Racism is shown through Rosaleen and Lily’s arrest, Lily and Zach’s love affair, and also June’s dislike towards Lily. Many characters in the novel come to experience racism or discrimination directly.…

    • 663 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Multicultural Items

    • 665 Words
    • 3 Pages

    One of the beauties of living in this world is the wealth of different beliefs and cultures that surround every person. Even living in someone’s home country does not exclude him or her from witnessing or experiencing different cultures. Anyone can immerse himself or herself in a different culture just by reading a story from an author that lives that culture everyday.…

    • 665 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Home Place

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The story ‘’The Home Place’’ by Guy Vanderhaeghe is about a relationship between a father and a son. Throughout the story, the readers see and understand the reason behind Gil and Ronald broken relationship. In this story, the author implies that when a father puts is love for is land before his son, their relation will suffer. Vanderheaghe explains his theme with the help of the characters traits, the setting and conflicts.…

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays