Playing in the dark

whiteness and the literary imagination

eBook, 91 pages

English language

Published 1992 by Harvard University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-307-38863-6
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OCLC Number:
431384879

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5 stars (1 review)

Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Toni Morrison brings the genius of a master writer to this personal inquiry into the significance of African-Americans in the American literary imagination. Her goal, she states at the outset, is to "put forth an argument for extending the study of American literature ... draw a map, so to speak, of a critical geography and use that map to open as much space for discovery, intellectual adventure, and close exploration as did the original charting of the New World--without the mandate for conquest." Author of Beloved, The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, and other vivid portrayals of black American experience, Morrison ponders the effect that living in a historically racialized society has had on American writing in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. She argues that race has become a metaphor, a way of referring to forces, events, and forms of social decay, economic division, and human panic. …

5 editions

Subjects

  • American literature -- White authors -- History and criticism
  • African Americans in literature
  • Human skin color in literature
  • Blacks in literature
  • Whites in literature
  • White in literature
  • Race in literature