Carefully following the chronology of Toni Morrison’s novels until Paradise (1997), this article focuses on Morrison’s rewriting of the Fall as the American “grand narrative” and basis of a powerful sexist and racist ideology via a number of black female characters variously characterized as outcasts. From Pecola, the alienated victim of the WASP definition of beauty to Consolata, the “revised Reverend Mother,” Morrison’s fiction appears to weave its way through the moral complexities of African American female resistance to white male rule—theologically based on the canonical reading of the Fall as supreme calamity caused by Eve, the arch-temptress and sinner—to hand authority back to the pariah and wrongdoer: the black woman. However, fa...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
In her 1998 novel Paradise, Morrison plays with her reader’s desire in terms of gender, race and rel...
In Beloved and A Mercy Toni Morrison revisits the mother-daughter plot, focusing on the feminine. Sh...
Cette analyse chronologique des romans de Toni Morrison jusque Paradise (paru en 1997) met en relief...
This article explores author Toni Morrison’s creation of female spiritual leaders in her 1977 ...
The Society of USA is consisted of many different racial groups. It could be said that among these g...
Toni Morrison, the first African-American Nobel Prize winner, and one of the most influential writer...
Toni Morrison ranks among the most highly-regarded and widely-read fiction writers and cultural crit...
Toni Morrison is among the pioneer of those contemporary black women writers,best known for her int...
This article examines two of Toni Morrison’s novels, The Bluest Eye and Beloved in the lights of bla...
Gone are the days when African-American literature was considered marginalized and inferior. It has ...
In her 1998 novel Paradise, Morrison plays with her reader’s desire in terms of gender, race and rel...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
By maintaining an “I”/“other” dynamic through the dehumanizing of the economically disadvantaged Afr...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
In her 1998 novel Paradise, Morrison plays with her reader’s desire in terms of gender, race and rel...
In Beloved and A Mercy Toni Morrison revisits the mother-daughter plot, focusing on the feminine. Sh...
Cette analyse chronologique des romans de Toni Morrison jusque Paradise (paru en 1997) met en relief...
This article explores author Toni Morrison’s creation of female spiritual leaders in her 1977 ...
The Society of USA is consisted of many different racial groups. It could be said that among these g...
Toni Morrison, the first African-American Nobel Prize winner, and one of the most influential writer...
Toni Morrison ranks among the most highly-regarded and widely-read fiction writers and cultural crit...
Toni Morrison is among the pioneer of those contemporary black women writers,best known for her int...
This article examines two of Toni Morrison’s novels, The Bluest Eye and Beloved in the lights of bla...
Gone are the days when African-American literature was considered marginalized and inferior. It has ...
In her 1998 novel Paradise, Morrison plays with her reader’s desire in terms of gender, race and rel...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
By maintaining an “I”/“other” dynamic through the dehumanizing of the economically disadvantaged Afr...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
In New Dimensions of Spirituality, Karla Holloway and Stephanie Demetrakopoulos define Morrison\u27s...
In her 1998 novel Paradise, Morrison plays with her reader’s desire in terms of gender, race and rel...
In Beloved and A Mercy Toni Morrison revisits the mother-daughter plot, focusing on the feminine. Sh...