International Journal of Academic and Applied Research (IJAAR)
  Year: 2020 | Volume: 4 | Issue: 10 | Page No.: 27-33
Alice Walker and the Theory of Womanism in Her Stories
Narimanova Jamola Yuldashbayevna

Abstract:
This article is intended to provide basic information about the life and work of African-American writer Alice Walker. discuss well-known problems of teaching culture. African-American author Alice Walker, in her story "Daily Use," labeling her female characters with the quality of Ms. Johnson and her two daughters, Maggie and Din, animals. In this article, I will try to show the central and central role played by the "Animal Epithet" mechanism to test the extent to which the writer applied the theory of "Femininity" to his short fiction and other protagonists. Walker wants the reader to share his or her investigative journey to find logical answers to the critical questions raised in the research material: Why does Walker describe female characters by comparing them to animals? How is Walker able to have an aesthetic approach to this topic? Which portrait of a black woman does he prove? To answer these central questions, Walker is committed to building his short story work on the basic elements of inversion, in a gesture-like and quilted manner. Walker opposes and ridicules the main agent of humanism, which represents white men as women and animal activists. It transforms the meaning of the negative, inhuman image produced by the ruling class men and used every day in an aesthetic and positive way to express the aesthetic and uniqueness of black women.