Ebook: Quiet As It's Kept: Shame, Trauma, and Race in the Novels of Toni Morrison
Author: J. Brooks Bouson, Henry Sussman
- Series: Psychoanalysis and Culture
- Year: 2000
- Publisher: State University of New York Press
- City: Albany
- Edition: electronic
- Language: English
- pdf
Quiet As Its Kept draws on and extends recent psychoanalytic and psychiatric work of shame and trauma theorists to offer an in-depth analysis of Toni Morrisons representation of painful and shameful race matters in her fiction. Providing a frank and sustained look at the troubling, if not distressing, aspects of Morrisons fiction that other critics have studiously avoided or minimized in their commentaries, this book challenges established views of Morrison, showing her to be an author who forces readers into uncomfortable confrontations with matters of race. In Quiet As Its Kept, J. Brooks Bouson explores these issues in Morrisons works The Bluest Eye, Sula, Song of Solomon, Tar Baby, Beloved, Jazz, and Paradise.
Morrison, Nobel prize-winning author, has viewed part of her cultural and literary task as a writer to bear witness to the plight of black Americans. Quiet as its kept, much of our business, our existence here, has been grotesque. It really has, she has commented. As she exposes to public view sensitive race matters in her fiction, Morrison presents jarring depictions of the trauma of slavery and the horrors of racist oppression and black-on-black violence.
Morrison, Nobel prize-winning author, has viewed part of her cultural and literary task as a writer to bear witness to the plight of black Americans. Quiet as its kept, much of our business, our existence here, has been grotesque. It really has, she has commented. As she exposes to public view sensitive race matters in her fiction, Morrison presents jarring depictions of the trauma of slavery and the horrors of racist oppression and black-on-black violence.
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