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E-raamat: Goodness and the Literary Imagination: Harvard's 95th Ingersoll Lecture with Essays on Morrison's Moral and Religious Vision

  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Virginia Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780813943633
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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Virginia Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780813943633

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Perhaps because it is overshadowed by the more easily defined evil, goodness often escapes our attention. Recalling many literary examples, from Ahab to Coetzee’s Michael K, Toni Morrison seeks the essence of goodness and ponders its significant place in her writing.

What exactly is goodness? Where is it found in the literary imagination? Toni Morrison, one of American letters’ greatest voices, pondered these perplexing questions in her celebrated Ingersoll Lecture, delivered at Harvard University in 2012 and published now for the first time in book form.

Perhaps because it is overshadowed by the more easily defined evil, goodness often escapes our attention. Recalling many literary examples, from Ahab to Coetzee’s Michael K, Morrison seeks the essence of goodness and ponders its significant place in her writing. She considers the concept in relation to unforgettable characters from her own works of fiction and arrives at conclusions that are both eloquent and edifying. In a lively interview conducted for this book, Morrison further elaborates on her lecture’s ideas, discussing goodness not only in literature but in society and history—particularly black history, which has responded to centuries of brutality with profound creativity.

Morrison’s essay is followed by a series of responses by scholars in the fields of religion, ethics, history, and literature to her thoughts on goodness and evil, mercy and love, racism and self-destruction, language and liberation, together with close examination of literary and theoretical expressions from her works. Each of these contributions, written by a scholar of religion, considers the legacy of slavery and how it continues to shape our memories, our complicities, our outcries, our lives, our communities, our literature, and our faith. In addition, the contributors engage the religious orientation in Morrison’s novels so that readers who encounter her many memorable characters such as Sula, Beloved, or Frank Money will learn and appreciate how Morrison’s notions of goodness and mercy also reflect her understanding of the sacred and the human spirit.

Arvustused

"The publication of this extraordinary book could not have arrived at a more propitious moment. At a time when the country as a whole seems tormented by the corrosive presence of a new kind of evil that is trying to banish any memory, much less evidence, of its opposite, Goodness and the Literary Imagination reminds readers of evils opposite, but in forms that Morrisons fiction renders again strange. Its publication should be treated as a major event; its contribution to American literary and religious studies is absolutely assured."

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Toni Morrison's Religion 1(12)
Toni Morrison, "Goodness: Altruism and the Literary Imagination," Ingersoll Lecture 2011 13(10)
I Significant Landscapes and Sacred Places
Haunted by Slavery
23(12)
Walter Johnson
Omo Opitaridiran, an Africanist Griot: Toni Morrison and African Epistemology, Myths, and Literary Culture
35(25)
Jacob K. Olupona
Structures of Stone and Rings of Light: Spirited Landscapes in Toni Morrison's Beloved
60(21)
Tiya Miles
II Putting Goodness Onstage
Evocations of Intimacies: Comments on Toni Morrison's Home
81(18)
Charles H. Long
Morrison's Pietas as Participatory Loss and Love
99(17)
Mara Willard
The Ghost of Love and Goodness
116(22)
David Carrasco
Demons and Dominion: Possession and Dispossession in Toni Morrison's A Mercy
138(17)
Matthew Potts
III Giving Goodness a Voice
Ministry in Paradise
155(13)
Stephanie Paulsell
Luminous Darkness: Africanist Presence and the American Soul
168(10)
Jonathan L. Walton
Going Backstage: Soaphead Church and the (Religious) Problem of Goodness in The Bluest Eye
178(21)
Biko Mandela Gray
Unsung No More: Pilate's Mercy! Eulogy in Song of Solomon
199(17)
Gerald "Jay" Williams
Quiet, as It's Kept and Lovingly Disrupted by Baby Suggs, Holy: On the Volume of Goodness in Beloved
216(11)
Josslyn Luckett
Writing Goodness and Mercy: A 2017 Interview with Toni Morrison 227(18)
Notes on Contributors 245(2)
Index 247
Toni Morrison is the author of eleven novels, from The Bluest Eye (1970) to God Help the Child (2015). She has received the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. In 1993 she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. She lives in New York.