Description
Book SynopsisA reading of the oeuvre of Toni Morrison—fiction, non-fiction, and other—drawing extensively from her many interviews as well as her primary texts, Toni Morrison: A Literary Life, second edition provides an overview of Morrison’s intellectual growth as an artist. Linda Wagner-Martin aligns Morrison's novels with the works of Virginia Woolf and William Faulkner, assessing her works as among the most innovative, and most significant, worldwide, of the past fifty plus years. The revised edition includes new discussion of God Help the Child, The Origin of Others, and The Source of Self-Regard. These additions present and intensify scholarship on Morrison’s major literary contributions, but also trace her significant role as a public intellectual, bringing to light the consistency of Morrison’s aesthetic and political visions.
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Morrison’s Early Years
Song of Solomon: One Beginning of Morrison’s Career
Tar Baby and Other Folktales.- Beloved, Beloved,
BelovedJazz and Morrison’s Trilogy: New York in the 1920sMorrison as Public IntellectualThe Nobel Prize in Literature and Morrison’s TrilogyMorrison and the Twenty-first Century: Love.- Morrison and Various MerciesMorrison and the Definitions of Home
God Help the Child.-
The Origin of Others and
The Source of Self-RegardCoda