In Love & Trouble: Stories of Black Women Literary Elements

In Love & Trouble: Stories of Black Women Literary Elements

Genre

Drama

Setting and Context

1960s, Mississippi, U.S.

Narrator and Point of View

Each story has its own narrator, mostly omniscient
PoV keeps changing with the story

Tone and Mood

Tone is sombre. Mood remains mostly sad.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Protagonist is usually a woman of color with a problem in her life. The people around her influenced by racism and patriarchal values are the antagonists.

Major Conflict

The major conflict lies with the women trying to live a peaceful life, which becomes difficult due to their color and status.

Climax

In 'the Child Who Favored Daughter', the tension escalates to maximum during a scene in which the father mutilates his daughter for having a relationship with his white boss.

Foreshadowing

In 'the Revenge of hannah Kemhuff', Tante Rosie predicts that Sarah Saddle will die in six months after Mrs. Kemhuff dies, which proves to be true.

Understatement

Ruel often understated his wife's writing talent and tried to distract her with thoughts of a baby, while her works were published by Mordecai Rich

Allusions

Constant allusions to tribal African religious practices is made.

Imagery

Imagery of Southern farms is strong where racism was most prevalent, particularly in stories like 'The Flowers'.

Paradox

In 'the Revenge of Hannah Kemhuff', Tante Rosie popularizes her as a witch who could make people fall to their deaths using magic, but Sarah Marie dies as a result of a placebo effect of fear of having witches lose on her.

Parallelism

All the stories have an element of love, where men do not appreciate the women for who they are.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

NA

Personification

In the story 'The child Who favored Daughter', the gun father uses is cradled like a baby, signifying how violence is the actual offspring of racism.

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