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International Journal Of Language, Literature And Culture(IJLLC)

Sula: The Meaning of That Little Girl Who Grew into a Woman

Dr. Mohammad Hosseini Gatloud


International Journal of Language, Literature and Culture (IJLLC), Vol-5,Issue-3, May - June 2025, Pages 88-97, 10.22161/ijllc.5.3.13

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Article Info: Received: 29 Apr 2025, Received in revised form: 30 May 2025, Accepted: 05 Jun 2025, Available online: 10 Jun 2025

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This article explores the symbolic significance of Sula Peace in Toni Morrison’s Sula, arguing that her life and death signal a radical break from the Bottom community’s stagnant moral codes and fatalistic worldview. Through close textual analysis, the essay contends that the mass death of the Bottom’s residents near the novel’s end marks the collapse of outdated social values—particularly the community’s dependence on passive endurance, moral insularity, and gendered sacrifice. Rather than heeding Sula’s call for revolutionary change, the community unites against her in superficial solidarity, ultimately sealing its own demise. Drawing on theory of the docility-brutality myth, the article further explores how Morrison critiques internalized racial and patriarchal norms. Sula emerges as a prophetic figure whose defiance challenges the social foundations of her environment and opens the possibility for a future unbound by repression and conformity. Her legacy, culminating in Nel’s belated recognition of their shared truth, underscores Morrison’s vision of a rebirth through rupture—where old beliefs must die for new perspectives to take root.

inevitable death, docility, black insularity, sexism, black sexuality

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