The novel, Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, describes the life of a teenage girl, Kambili, who is raised in Nigeria. In the novel, Adichie uses two main settings to effectively describe the themes of freedom, silence, and repression. The two settings that are used in the novel are Kambili’s hometown in Enugu and another small town, Nsukka, where Kambili’s aunt and cousins live. The contrasts between the settings are startling. In Enugu, Kambili, her brother, Jaja, and her mother all face oppression from Papa. Over there, the teenagers don’t know what freedom is, and everything they do is determined by Papa. However, in Nsukka, both Kambili and her brother finally find out what freedom truly is, and because of that, they find themselves. …show more content…
“Mama didn’t come home that night and JaJa and I had dinner alone.” Basically when kambili and Jaja had gone up stairs they had found blood on the bathroom floor and was worried that something had happened to mama and the baby.To say that the kids were just worried about mama and wondering if she was okay. To conclude that the kids were in need of mama, when there was blood on the floor. Also when mama came home the next morning and was relieved of joy that she was back, but there was some bad news that the baby was gone. When she came home she had told JaJa and I that the baby was gone. “There was an incident, that the baby was gone”. To say that mama was sad about the break the news to the kids. To conclude that the kids were sad to hear that the baby was