Throughout her novels, Toni Morrison explores the complex
interaction of race, class, culture, and gender. This study takes
into account both Western and Black traditions to show how Morrison
not only denounces the constricting patterns of the dominant
culture, but also, through the reversal or subversion of Western
stereotypes, harnesses the rich potential for the significance they
contain.
While most recent studies of Morrison examine individual works
separately, this book concentrates on particular dimensions of
Morrison's fiction and explores the continuities and developments
from her first to most recent novel. And while other studies
generally approach Morrison from a particular critical perspective,
this book instead considers the interaction of multiple
determinants such as race and gender, and gives special attention
to the pressure exerted by dominant cultural forms. The authors
demonstrate how in contradiction to the dominant culture's ideology
of unity and homogeneity, Morrison makes a case for the value of
difference in a diverse society.
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