For the first time since Beloved, Toni Morrison returns to slavery in A Mercy (2008): the slave trade is allegorized as a pox upon the initially utopian Vaark farm. Though in the face of systematic discourses of oth-ering, each oppressed character puts up strategies of resistance, the dialec-tic of love, loss, and alienation in Florens s story permeates the entire nov-el. But Florens s voice offers resistance and empowerment as well: the house that Jacob built and that Florens haunts is, in a mise en abyme of the house of fiction reclaimed by Toni Morrison, a black repossession of the house that slavery built
Regarded as a state of servitude through which an individual or a group of persons is compelled to w...
The publications of Hortense Spillers’ Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book and Toni ...
Toni Morrison's ninth novel, A Mercy, distributed in 2008, is an invite re-visitation of the amazing...
For the first time since Beloved, Toni Morrison returns to slavery in A Mercy (2008): the slave trad...
In Toni Morrison s A Mercy, the protagonist represents both the historical and the contemporary Afri...
The paper argues that the slave history writing is not only the concern of historians but also of cr...
In light of (re)new(ed) interest in focusing interdisciplinary scholarly attention on the history of...
Toni Morrison uses tragic stories of young girls to display societal themes throughout her novels. M...
This article discusses the status of Toni Morrison as an American writer who consistently foreground...
In this introduction, Michel Feith problematizes the complex relation between writing and the histor...
Toni Morrison faces a great challenge in representing the Atlantic slave trade. In contemporary narr...
The works of Toni Morrison to a great extent mirror the history of Afro-Americans. As a main figure ...
An enslaved individual usually escapes or is manumitted before writing his or her narrative. But wha...
The epilogue of Toni Morrison s A Mercy (2008) is narrated by the teenage character-narrator Florens...
ABSTRACT This research is conducted to draw attention to the dangers of violence and its cycle. B...
Regarded as a state of servitude through which an individual or a group of persons is compelled to w...
The publications of Hortense Spillers’ Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book and Toni ...
Toni Morrison's ninth novel, A Mercy, distributed in 2008, is an invite re-visitation of the amazing...
For the first time since Beloved, Toni Morrison returns to slavery in A Mercy (2008): the slave trad...
In Toni Morrison s A Mercy, the protagonist represents both the historical and the contemporary Afri...
The paper argues that the slave history writing is not only the concern of historians but also of cr...
In light of (re)new(ed) interest in focusing interdisciplinary scholarly attention on the history of...
Toni Morrison uses tragic stories of young girls to display societal themes throughout her novels. M...
This article discusses the status of Toni Morrison as an American writer who consistently foreground...
In this introduction, Michel Feith problematizes the complex relation between writing and the histor...
Toni Morrison faces a great challenge in representing the Atlantic slave trade. In contemporary narr...
The works of Toni Morrison to a great extent mirror the history of Afro-Americans. As a main figure ...
An enslaved individual usually escapes or is manumitted before writing his or her narrative. But wha...
The epilogue of Toni Morrison s A Mercy (2008) is narrated by the teenage character-narrator Florens...
ABSTRACT This research is conducted to draw attention to the dangers of violence and its cycle. B...
Regarded as a state of servitude through which an individual or a group of persons is compelled to w...
The publications of Hortense Spillers’ Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book and Toni ...
Toni Morrison's ninth novel, A Mercy, distributed in 2008, is an invite re-visitation of the amazing...