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Three Black Writers of American Modernism
Alice Walker (English: Alice Walker,1February 9, 944-), an American writer and social activist, has won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and the National Book Award of the United States [1][2][3], which is the representative work of The Purple Sisters adapted by Steven Allan Spielberg.

Toni Morrison (193 1 February 18-), an important author of African literature in the United States, is one of the most important writers in the world literature, and won the Nobel Prize in Literature with the anthology 1993. Some of her works are classified as American literature, including The Bluest Eye. Morrison has won many literary awards, including National Book Award, National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize and 1993 Nobel Prize in Literature. Most of his works are based on African-American life, with delicate brushstrokes, vivid characters, strong language stories and rich imagination. 20 12 On May 8th, Tony Morrison, who was 8 1 year old, published his new work "Home". Home tells the story of an American veteran who went to the Korean battlefield to atone for his sins.

In Women in Brewster and Linton, Gloria Naylor describes the living conditions of urban blacks who live at the bottom of the well and can't open the manhole cover through the image of "well", which is caused by the dominant ideology of American society.