Discuss The Life Journey Undertaken By Avey Johnson As She Searches For Herself, In the novel "A Praise Song for the Widow" by Paulie Marshall.

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As an epigraph to the section entitled "LAVÉ TÊTE," the third section of her novel Praisesong for the Widow, Paule Marshall uses a brief quotation from a poem by Randall Jarrell: "Oh, Bars of my ... body open, open!" (148). It is in this section that Avey Johnson, the novel's protagonist, becomes aware of her body as a repository of memory, as a place where physical sensation echoes emotional feeling. This awareness …

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…with dance. Citing Katherine Dunham's explication of funeral dances as an externalization of energy, she extends this perspective to Avey's experience: "If, as Dunham argues, emotions like anger and grief are best resolved by either violent or rhythmic motor activity, then Avey's physical movement can be read like a text, charting her internal thoughts and emotions" (114). The Dance of the Cumana was her final step into reestablishing her roots and understanding who she really is.