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  1. Dec 1, 2018 · It turns to utopian scholars, Morrison scholars, and Morrison herself to theorize home-as-utopia in Morrison's work and discusses the novel in which it finds its fullest expression, 2012's Home. It explicates how, against a demythologizing dystopian portrayal of 1950s America, Morrison posits utopia not as an ideal or blueprint, or as an enclave or other space, but instead as an everyday ...

  2. Morrison scholars, and Morrison herself to theorize home-as-utopia in Morrison’s work and discusses the novel in which it finds its fullest expression, 2012’s . Home. It explicates how, against a demythologizing dystopian portrayal of 1950s America, Morrison posits utopia not as an ideal or blueprint, or as an enclave or other space, but ...

  3. It turns to utopian scholars, Morrison scholars, and Morrison herself to theorize home-as-utopia in Morrison's work and discusses the novel in which it finds its fullest expression, 2012's Home.

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  4. Mar 24, 2023 · In Morrison’s novel, the American tehom swirls with any number of possible outcomes and directions. To be clear, there was nothing utopian about these formational years; pre-America America was ...

  5. Jun 11, 2018 · By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on June 11, 2018 • ( 4 ) In all of her fiction, Toni Morrison (February 18, 1931- August 06, 2019) explored the conflict between society and the individual. She showed how the individual who defies social pressures can forge a self by drawing on the resources of the natural world, on a sense of continuity within the ...

  6. This article explores Toni Morrison's preoccupation with, and reimagining of, the landscape of the so-called New World. Drawing on scholarship that has investigated dominant discourses about freedom, bounty, and possibility located within the Americas, it identifies various counternarratives in Morrison's fiction, tracing these through the earlier Song of Solomon (1977), Tar Baby (1981), and ...

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  8. The Rise and Fall of the White Republic: Class Politics and Mass Culture in Nineteenth-Century America. New York: Verso, 2003. Google Scholar Spargo, R. Clifton. “Trauma and the Specters of Enslavement in Morrison’s Beloved.” Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 35.1 (2002): 113–131.

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