The Poisonwood Bible

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    The novel, The Poisonwood Bible opens with a narrative directive to get the reader to use their imagination to imagine the setting, so he/she can know where the story is about to take place. This suggests that the novel is about to have a lot of events unfolding and they are going to be important because the author wants the reader to picture everything that is happening. Orleanna Price’s narration uses “you” in her storytelling, which the “you” refers to Ruth May Price because she blames…

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    The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver tells a story about a family who moves to Africa as missionaries in hopes to be able to help the village they stay at, Kilanga. During their time in the Congo, they will go through some unexpected troubles that will forever change the Price family. Throughout the book, the author uses some biblical allusion that helps relate the story to the Bible. In the novel, Leah states that her "father [was] as tall as Goliath and pure of heart as David"…

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    In The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver, the need to break away from family on behalf of someone’s own well being is a lesson readers have learned from this novel. When the family’s missionary effort to convert Africans to Christianity becomes perilous, the father/husband, nonetheless, continues to follow through with his mission at the hands of his own family’s demise. Later on in the novel, the family goes separate directions after the youngest daughter passed away from a snakebite,…

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    Berry AP Literature IV- 7 18 January 2018 A Psychoanalytic Interpretation of The Poisonwood Bible “To be, or not to be” is at the crux of humanity’s downfall. To have a personhood is in absence of the “uncivilized” and “inhumane.” Colonialism fabricated dialectic oppositions of race to maintain economic dominance and secure a sense of self in the colonizer. Kingsolver’s postcolonial nineties novel, “The Poisonwood Bible”, she critiques imperialist, racist, sexist, and ablest assumptions. Her…

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    Aviance Carlisle Harvey APLC 9-7-14 In Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible Nathan Price leaves home yet,he finds that home remains significant in his life; home’s significant to instill the morals that he lived by before his move to Congo and how they were able to be heightened afterwards, leading him to develop a more controlling personality while inflicting his beliefs on others. Nathan fought in War World II and almost lost his life, but was lucky enough to escape the death…

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    For my Poisonwood Bible project I made an art piece with the focus on the entire Price family. The year is marked 1959(which is the year the Price family arrived at the Congo) but it contains ideas and symbols from throughout the whole book. The most noticeable thing on the canvas is the huge and colorful parrot flying above. The parrot is obviously Methuselah who is a notable character in the book and who also symbolizes the Congo. Some clear evidence why Methuselah and the Congo go together…

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    In Barbara Kingsolver’s novel, The Poisonwood Bible, the villain of the story is the Price family patriarch, Nathan Price. Nathan Price is abusive, sexist, and racist. All of these traits cause a problem between him and his family or the Kilanga village, I’m which the story takes place. Nathan Price lives with his wife, and 4 daughters in the village of Kilanga in the Congo. However, his abusive behavior starts to cause a rift between him and his family. I’m the beginning of the story Nathan…

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    Barbara Kingsolver used Ruth May in the Poisonwood Bible to summarize her overarching message of misinformation that was present throughout the entirety of the novel. The first instance of misinformation occurred when the Price family arrived at the airport to leave for the Congo. Everyone over packed and they had to decide what was imperative to take and what they could throw away. They ended up taking things that were not needed and had no use in the Congo such as cake mix. While cake mix is…

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    that there are so many cultures around the world is because every single place on earth is different. From the Sahara Desert in North Africa to the Amazon Rainforest in Brazil, people have developed their own cultures in order to survive. In The Poisonwood Bible, the Price family moves to the Congo as missionaries. By including Ruth May’s childish outlook, Kingsolver gives the reader a straightforward point of view of Nathan Price’s single-minded mission to convert the Congo to Christianity.…

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    It has been said that what we value can be determined only by what we sacrifice. This applies to several characters in Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible, especially Orleanna, Nathan, and their daughters. Through their sacrifices, characteristics and values become evident in these characters that would not be understood otherwise. The sacrifices made by these characters contribute to the novel as a whole by giving it depth and greater meaning, just as these sacrifices make each…

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