Sula's Rebellion Againts the Black Conventional Values as the Indicator of Her Feminist Spirit in Toni Morrison's Sula
Abstract
Sula a novel written by Toni Morrison tells about a black woman who rebel against the patriarchal system, racial
oppression and class discrimination as the conventional values in Bottom society, where the blacks live.This
thesis focuses on Sula’s Rebellion against the black conventional values as the indicator of her feminist spirit in
Toni Morrison’s Sula. Sula as the main female character breaks and rebels the conventional values surrounding
her. The strongest influential factors that shape and influence Sula’s rebellion are coming from the society, family
and friendship. She breaks the patriarchal culture and the racial problems within her society by rejecting marriage
and having free sexual partner. For those reasons, Sula is named a pariah and evil. The research employs
Marxism and Afro-American Feminism to discuss the dominant ideology of whites, classes, and racialism in the
world of black feminism. The research is qualitative research which applies text in Sula as the basic data. The
data are analyzed to show the reason of Sula's rebellion in rejecting marriage and having free sexual life. The
data reveals that black women face double oppression such as patriarchy and racialism. Therefore, the study is
significant to understand Afro-American women and their struggle against oppression of patriarchal system and
racial problems in their society.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7356]