Toni Morrison
Price:
$23.00 (01)A Fordham University Press Publication
Description
Toni Morrison: An Ethical Poetics situates Toni Morrison as a writer who writes about writing as much as about racialized, engendered, and sexualized African American, and therefore American, experience. In foregrounding the ethics of fiction writing, the book resists any triumphalist reading of Morrison's achievement in order to allow the meditative, unsettled, and unsettling questions that arise throughout her long labor at the nexus of language and politics, where her fiction interrogates representation itself.Moving between close reading and critical theory, Toni Morrison: An Ethical Poetics reveals the ways in which Morrison's primary engagement with language has been a search for how and what language is made to communicate, and for how and what speaks in and from generation to generation. There is no easy escape from
such legacy, no escape into a pure language free of the burdens of racialized agendas. Rather, there is the example of Morrison's commitment to writerly, which is to say readerly, wakefulness.
At a time when sustained study devoted to single authors has become rare, this book will be an invaluable resource for readers, scholars, and teachers of Morrison's work.
Features
- This, Christianse first full-length scholarly work, should make her a major voice in black literary scholarship, especially its theoretical side.
- The author has an uncanny grasp of Morrison's entire oeuvre, and in every chapter she ranges across all that work, drawing out hitherto unnoticed themes and connections.
- Above all, Christianse treats Morrison as a writer in the modernist tradition, an author who contributes not just to our understanding of the trauma of race but to our understanding of writing itself, and how the two interrelate.
Reviews
"A rich, powerful, and refreshing contribution to the study of Toni
Morrison's oeuvre. This book engages the Nobel laureate's work with
uncommon clarity and command, while brilliantly situating language and its
ethical dimensions at the center of its inquiry. Blending convincing and
careful close readings with critical theory, Yvette Christianse crafts a
fine, durable interpretive lens through which we may more intelligently
view the challenges and power of Morrison's art."--Stephane Robolin, Rutgers University
About the Author(s)
Yvette Christainse is Associate Professor of English at Fordham University and Visiting Associate Professor of English and Africana Studies at Barnard College. She is the author of two books of poetry. Her debut novel Unconfessed (Other Press, 2007) was a finalist for the Hemingway/PEN Prize for first fiction and a recipient of a 2007 ForeWord Magazine BEA Award. In addition, it was shortlisted
for the University of Johannesburg Prize and the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award in 2008.
