1. insouciant (page 96): lighthearted unconcern; nonchalance.
2. As soon as Sula returns to the Bottom she is judged by the style of her expensive clothes. Eva ridicules her for not being married, Sula then tells her that cutting off her own leg does not give her the authority to control other people's lives. Sula accuses Eva of murdering Plum, she retorts with the fact that she watched Hannah burn to death. Sula threatens to kill Eva, and later when she becomes Eva's guardian she admits her to a nursing home which causes others to believe that she is evil.
Nel and Sula eventually start spending more time together, and through
Nel's husband Jude's teasing of Sula the two eventually engage in an affair which is one day discovered by
Nel who walks in on them. She feels extremely angered and betrayed by her best friend and husband because Jude leaves her and their children. The community gossips about Sula, and even credit many random accidents to her. Sula has frequent affairs, including with white men. When she has a passionate affair with Ajax, he leaves her after his discovery that she wishes to marry him. Sula soon becomes very ill and
Nel decides to visit her and take care of her. She also questions why she had an affair with Jude and they talk about each other's loneliness. Sula soon becomes very remorseful and pained as she remembers watching her mother burn to death and not doing anything about it. She suddenly realizes that she has stopped breathing, her heart stopped and all she wants to do is tell
Nel that death is painless. At first the community believes that her death will bring good things to them, however, then there is a brutal frost killing many animals and crops and also causing people to lose valuable days of work. Without having Sula as a common enemy for the town, the people also begin to fall apart until it warms up the day before National Suicide Day.
Shadrack feels lonely, remembering the only visitor that ever came to see him which was Sula. The next day, he does not feel like participating but he ends up leading a march to the construction site to vandalize it because they were not allowed to have the jobs because they were black. The site collapses, and many people including the
Deweys drown.
3. I think the way that love is portrayed in this novel is very interesting. First of all, Morrison introduces a concept that is new to me. It is not necessary to like somebody in order to love them. I am not sure if I agree or disagree with this statement. However, it is exemplified when Hannah tells Sula that she loves her, but does not like her. Hannah then goes on to suggest that she did in fact feed her children and put clothes on their back, isn't that enough? Does this prove that she really loves them or simply took care of them because she felt obligated to as their mother? Also, Eva raises Plum with plenty of love and care but then she ends up killing him. This event left me baffled, can this be considered an act of love? Just as I was starting to think that Eva was a terrible, heartless mother she makes an attempt to save Hannah when she is being burned by the fire. What is Morrison trying to say here? In addition to this, Nel and Sula were best friends for years, practically inseperable and then Sula has an affair with Nel's husband? How can Sula have loved her, as a friend, and still betray her like that? Romantically speaking, Sula sleeps with many men having meaningless sex with all of them, and the second she wants more out of her relationship with Ajax, he leaves her. What is Morrison suggesting here?
4. a) Has Morrison taken a stance on evil in this novel? This question was asked in the class activity we did, and I couldn't help but wonder is Morrison simply accepting of evil in the world? Is she concluding that there is good and evil in everybody, in every community? Or neither?
b) Was the community correct in thinking that Sula is evil? Immediately after her death they thought good things would happen to them now that she, and the evil brought to the community were gone. However, then the brutal frost comes and destroys the crops and livestock putting many people out of work. Is this Morrison's way of saying she is not evil?
c) Is Sula and Nel's relationship an example of the idea that you do not have to like somebody to love them? Although Sula betrayed Nel, she still comes to visit her when she is sick and offers to take care of her. Also, she is described to be weeping at Sula's grave. To me, this could mean that she loves her but does not necessarily like what she did.