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  1. Why did Dee change her name? Dee changes her name to Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo in an attempt to embrace her African roots and redefine her identity. She argues that “Dee” is a white woman’s name, and she could no longer stand having a name associated with oppression.

  2. Jul 3, 2024 · Summary: Dee's character in "Everyday Use" is portrayed as superficial and materialistic. She values heritage as a means of self-expression rather than a lived...

  3. This recalls Dee’s adoption of an African name, from a culture her family hasn’t been a part of for generations, instead of keeping the name Dee, which has much more meaning in the recent past. For Dee, heritage must be fully removed from her current life in order to be appealing.

  4. Why did Dee leave home? She went to college. Who is the narrator? Mama. Why do you think Alice Walker titled this story "Everyday Use"? The story is centered around the conflict of Dee wanting special items from Mama's house only to put them on display and never use them.

  5. Dee tries to explain why she made these choices, but Mama sees it as an affront to their personal history and not what it truly isDee's understanding of the deeper history of Black people in the south.

  6. Dee, a young, well-educated, and self-confident African-American woman, is Mama ’s daughter and Maggie ’s sister. The story centers around Dee’s visit with her family at her childhood home in the Deep South. As a child, Dee was angry, bitter, and resentful towards her family and their poverty.

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  8. Mrs. Johnson decided to stand up to Dee and not allow her to take the quilts at the end of the story because she sees Maggieś reaction to having to let go of the quilt and something just clicks and she realizes how Maggie is really treated unfairly and how privileged Dee acts.