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Toni Morrison and the Idea of Africa
An original study of the importance of West African religious symbols used in Morrison's fiction.
La Vinia Delois Jennings (Author)
9780521885041, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 17 April 2008
260 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.57 kg
"Jennings is adept at portraying African elements in all their rich complexity and demonstrating their function in Morrison's novels without any sense of reductiveness."
American Literary Scholarship, Jerome Klinkowitz, University of Northern Iowa
Toni Morrison's fiction has been read as a contribution to and critique of Western civilization and Christianity. La Vinia Jennings reveals the fundamental role African traditional religious symbols play in her work. Based on extensive research into West African religions and philosophy, Jennings uncovers and interprets the African themes, images and cultural resonances in Morrison's fiction. She shows how symbols brought to the Americas by West African slaves are used by Morrison in her landscapes, interior spaces, and the bodies of her characters. Jennings's analysis of these symbols shows how a West African collective worldview informs both Morrison's work, and contemporary African-American life and culture. This important contribution to Morrison studies will be of great interest to scholars of African-American literature.
1. Introduction: finding the elusive but identifiable blackness within the culture out of which Toni Morrison writes
2. Kongo's Yowa and Dahomey's Vodun: the survival of West African traditional cosmologies in African America
3. Bandoki: witches, ambivalent power, and the fusion of good and evil
4. Kanda: living elders, the ancestral presence, and the ancestor as foundation
5. Banganga: the specialists-medicine (wo)men and priest(esse)s
6. Identifiable blackness: Toni Morrison's literary canon at the Western crossroads
Works cited
Index.
Subject Areas: African history [HBJH], Literary studies: general [DSB]