Morrison’s Black Feminist Discourse in A Mercy

Abstract

A Mercy is Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison’s ninth novel. As a writer and black feminist, Morrison devotes her career to give voice to the silenced, to make the unspeakable things speak and to be heard. She challenged the conventional values imposed on black women by presenting various female characters in her novels. Black women suffer from double oppression, both from gender and race. Through her writings, Morrison endowed black women ways of expressing their pains and sufferings. By releasing their painful past, they can gain their identity and subjectivity. They can finally rebuild and shape themselves. This article explores the black feminist discourse in her novel A Mercy.

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Wang, Y. (2015) Morrison’s Black Feminist Discourse in A Mercy. Open Journal of Social Sciences, 3, 234-238. doi: 10.4236/jss.2015.311028.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Davis, C. (1988) Interview with Toni Morrison. Presence Africaine, 145, 141-150.
[2] Morrison, T. (1992) Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
[3] Li, S. (2010) Toni Morrison: A Biography. Greenwood Press, Santa Barbara.
[4] Mori, A. (1999) Toni Morrison and Womanist Discourse. Peter Lang Publishing, New York.
[5] Morrison, T. (2008) Discuses A Mercy with Lynn Neary. National Public Radio Book Tour, Bay City.
[6] Morrison, T. (2008) A Mercy. Random House, New York.

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