In the fall of 2009, I taught a fourth-year undergraduate course on Toni Morrison. I haven’t looked at my course materials in over a decade. Here’s what I found.
WEEK 2
Sep 8/10 |
Sep 9: Final day to add or drop a course | THE BLUEST EYE (1970)
Beauty, race, self-hate Two crimes and their consequences |
1. What can you do to make someone love you? That is, what can you do to the beloved
?
a. Close read p. 206.
2. How can you make yourselves more lovable? That is, what can you do to yourself
?
4. Morrison and cruelty. Is she unreasonably cruel to her characters? Is Morrison too graphic?
The Breedloves, Soaphead, Sula, Chicken Little, Shadrack, Plum, Boy Boy, Ajax, Milkman, The Deads, Pilate, Guitar, Hagar, Corinthians, Beloved, Baby Suggs, Sethe, Denver, Sixo, Buglar, Schoolteacher, Stamp Paid.
This is such a tender, metaphoric reading of Pecola’s situation: Pecola as dandelion. No one cares for their heads; folks just want the leaves, “their bodies,” as you put it. And then you show how Cholly’s rape only attends to her body. She has no voice. This metaphoric reading renders Pecola even more of a victim and makes the crime against her more brutal.
She comes to distrust her own perception of dandelions as beautiful plants, and after a small embarrassment inside the candy store, now joins the rest of the world in believing that they are weeds.
Lovely, sensitive reading.”
Ian Williams is the author of six books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. His latest book, Disorientation, considers the impact of racial encounters on ordinary people.
His novel, Reproduction, won the Scotiabank Giller Prize and was published in Canada, the US, the UK, and Italy. His poetry collection, Word Problems, converts the ethical and political issues of our time into math and grammar problems. It won the Raymond Souster Award. His previous collection, Personals, was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book Award. His short story collection, Not Anyone’s Anything , won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award for the best first collection of short fiction in Canada. His first book, You Know Who You Are , was a finalist for the ReLit Poetry Prize. He is a trustee for the Griffin Poetry Prize.
Williams completed his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto. After several years teaching poetry in the School of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia, Williams returned to the University of Toronto as a tenured professor of English. He was the 2014-2015 Canadian Writer-in-Residence for the University of Calgary’s Distinguished Writers Program. In 2022, he will be the Visiting Fellow at the American Library in Paris.
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