Bíróné Nagy, KatalinPáles, Zsófia2013-05-292013-05-292008-12-222013-05-29http://hdl.handle.net/2437/169762African-American women writers enable us to envision what it is like to be black and female in a strongly patriarchal society marred by discrimination. How could one's voice be heard in a society where African-Americans had essentially no legacy to express their opinions prior to the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960's. African-Americans had long struggled to attain political and economic parity with the white majority, but they always found different forms of self-expression to convey the African- American experience. The short stories of Gloria Naylor and Alice Walker enrich the tradition of African-American writers and women writers by providing a yet unknown and different perspective on the lives of black women in the United States.44enAfrican-Amercan womenidentityA Comparative Analysis on Two Works by African-American Women WritersdiplomamunkaConstructing the Black Female Identity in Gloria Naylor's and Alice Walker's WorksDEENK Témalista::Irodalomtudomány::Összehasonlító irodalomtudományip