YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Recitatif by Toni Morrison
Essays 31 - 60
This essay of 5 pages explores the depths of war as something that encompasses people living everywhere. There are 4 additional s...
segments correlates with the seasons. The section about "See Jane," is really about Pecola, as opposite a presentation from the w...
This 5 page paper analyzes the first chapter of Song of Solomon, a novel by Toni Morrison. The writer suggests that in this openin...
in a celebration that includes dances that are a tribute to the "Old People," an annual tribute to ancestors. Avey is deeply moved...
complex, contradictory, evasive, independent and liquid modernity . . . (that) . . . ushers in the Jazz Age" (Basu 93). The Jazz A...
as dark and as evil as could be imagined." This could perhaps be followed with a statement arguing that "this is exactly the case ...
forbidden to them, they have set about creating something else to be" (Morrison 52). For example, Sula would go to Nels house to s...
to those themes" (Mayo 231). Another author indicates that "Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye emphasizes the de-culturing effects o...
a reference to "St. Louis Blues" by W.C. Handy which is one of the very first, and most popular, of blues songs (Morrison 25). F...
of Denver and Sethes children, and many others.This establishes the idea that family is very important and thus we can assume that...
lived with her before her death and that Sethe sought her out after escaping from slavery. The presence of the baby girls ghost ...
and perverts every aspect of their lives. Unlike the Hubbards, Reginas husband, Horace Giddens, is a man of principle. He has jus...
Sula because she has divorced herself so completely from her own emotions. By the end of the novel, both characters come to the re...
It is also interesting to note that when they grow, and separate, they take on the roles of their mothers: "Nel struggles to a con...
to the community, a clear case of moral ambiguity wherein Sula and her family felt they had a right and that their behavior was, o...
be that" (Bloom 17). The Bluest Eye fulfills this need, as it describes life from Pecola perspective, which includes how Pecola, a...
who seems to have been originally placed in the plantation to serve as the woman of the slaves. She was somewhat innocent and was ...
treated like a horse, complete with a bit in his mouth. Sethe managed to escape. In fact, because she was very pregnant and had b...
not acknowledge Pecola as her daughter, and Pecola does not avow Pauline as her mother. Distance is quite evident in this so-calle...
that most people believe to be haunted. A friend, Paul D determines to exorcise the ghost for her. After he has done so, Sethe is ...
of this is seen when she passes dandelions on the way to the store. "Why, she wonders, do people call them weeds? She thought they...
need for all women, especially of color, to assert themselves and claim their individual identity. This narrative adds texture to...
was painful or lost" (69). Beloved wants to hear about the diamond earrings that Mrs. Garner gave Sethe to mark her marital union...
life of the white people in society. Morrison often uses excerpts, that gradually become very distorted and run together in lines,...
planned any of it, but he had to know that one day, after Macon hit her, hed see his mothers hand cover her lips as she searched w...
"blackness" and the sense that the darker a person is, the less worthy they are of gaining social acceptance. In fact, Pecola is ...
friendship: conflict between human beings. The exact manner in which Morrison reveals this conflict is an integral component to t...
survivor of a slave ship, which crossed the water. With this crossing of the water, vast numbers of people had their way of life c...
where people were loud as they danced and sung amidst a house that was less than perfectly organized. As we can see in this very s...
was dictated by the fact that they were not white, and according to Katherine McKittricks literary criticism, they accepted their ...