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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2069/143

Title: The Presence, Roles and Functions of the Grotesque in Toni Morrison’s Novels
Authors: Baker, Alyce R.
Keywords: African American Literature
disability studies
folklore and myth
marginalization of African Americans
mothering
social and political aesthetic
Issue Date: 5-May-2009
Abstract: This dissertation focuses on Toni Morrison’s use of the grotesque as a social and political aesthetic. Various definitions and applications of the grotesque in art and literature are discussed in general and particular definitions and applications that pertain to Morrison’s novels are discussed and analyzed in terms of roles, functions, and purposes. In addition to the colloquial definition of the grotesque, the work of Mikhail Bahktin, John Ruskin, and Sigmund Freud aids in the identifications, as well as the work of more modern scholars of the grotesque such as Philip Thomson, Geoffrey Harpham, Bernard McElroy, Arthur Clayborough, Sherwood Anderson, Mary Russo, and Dieter Meindl. Discussions and analyses are situated in regard to Morrison’s potential purposes for writing, as well as recurring themes, motifs, and issues. Purposes, such as revealing African American female and adolescent self-hate, exposing oppressive social, cultural, and educational systems that negatively affect African Americans, and showing the paradoxical intersection between love and violence, are explored. Motifs, issues, and themes such as beauty, myth, mothering, stigmatization and marginalization of blacks, poverty, Western standard of beauty and double consciousness are examined as well.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2069/143
Appears in Collections:Electronic Dissertation

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