Article published In: Power and Narrative
Edited by Lisa Lau and Shari Daya
[Narrative Inquiry 17:1] 2007
► pp. 93–118
Buried perspectives
Narratives of landscape in Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon
Published online: 30 October 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.17.1.08ter
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.17.1.08ter
In examining representations of engagements with the North American landscape in the fiction of Toni Morrison, this article seeks to explore the author’s revision of dominant discourses about the topography and symbolic spaces of the continent and her exposure thereby of historical structures of power. Focusing on her fourth novel, Song of Solomon (1977), it traces how Morrison attempts to give voice to African American experience and identity and to revisit and contest familiar stories of national belonging and being in the land. In crafting tales of black displacement, dispossession, estrangement, travel, discovery, connection and home, the author is found to excavate buried perspectives and shape her own potent narrative act.
Keywords: Counter narrative, Displacement, Home, Inscription, Mapping, Naming, African American, American landscape
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
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