★ 10/01/2019
In her 2012 Ingersoll Lecture at Harvard, Nobel Prize-winning author Morrison (1931–2019) talked about goodness and literary imagination, suggesting that evil gets all the theatrics and attention while its counterpart is silent backstage. Morrison outlined three types of goodness and discussed how they appear in her novels. Here, Carrasco (religion & history, Harvard Univ.), Stephanie Paulsell (theology, Harvard Divinity Sch.; Religion Around Virginia Woolf), and Mara Willard (religion, theology, ethics, Boston Coll.) collect scholarly essays based on this lecture that explore Morrison's work using her definitions of goodness. Divided into three sections, "Significant Landscapes and Sacred Places," "Putting Goodness Onstage," and "Giving Goodness a Voice," and examining works such as The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, Beloved, Paradise, A Mercy, and Love, the volume concludes with a follow-up interview between Carrasco and Morrison, in which Morrison delves further into her ideas. VERDICT Interestingly, the essayists here, rather than literary experts, specialize in religion, history, theology, and ethics, which provides a refreshing analysis and perspective on Morrison's work and a valuable contribution to Morrison scholarship.—Stefanie Hollmichel, Univ. of St. Thomas Law Lib., Minneapolis
09/23/2019
This eloquent, wide-ranging collection comprises Morrison’s 2012 Ingersoll lecture at Harvard Divinity School, “Goodness: Altruism and the Literary Imagination”; scholarly essays on her fiction; and a spirited interview with the late novelist. In her talk, Morrison observes of contemporary fiction that “evil has a blockbuster audience; goodness lurks backstage,” in contrast to “the triumph of virtue” celebrated in 19th-century fiction. In her own books, Morrison explains, she prefers endings in which “the protagonist learns something... morally insightful that she or he did not know at the beginning.” The essays, contributed by the volume’s editors and others, examine such subjects as the role of spirits, ancestors, and nature in Morrison’s fiction; her take on the echoes of slavery in American life; and “how the religious dimensions of African American life permeate her novels, sometimes in Christian tones, sometimes in African tones.” In her interview, Morrison elaborates on her interest in exploring the nature of goodness, noting that, in response to slavery, “people who were treated like beasts did not become beastly,” but instead “chose creation.... jazz, the blues, schools, ideas.” This volume highlights Morrison’s invaluable contribution to American letters and suggests her influence will be felt for years to come. Agent: Donald Cutler, Bookmark Literary. (Oct.)
Here, in these pages, we meet one of our greatest literary artists and thinkers, Toni Morrison, and a group of her most engaging interlocutors as they illuminate the centrality of 'goodness' in her oeuvre. Taking a backward glance at her life’s work, Morrison insists 'Writing and trying to find a language for goodness is all I’ve ever done in the novel.' Throughout she has given us characters who embody goodness and characters who acquire self-knowledge only through practicing it. This volume places her efforts in a context that best illuminates the moral, ethical and religious dimensions of her work. In so doing it provides an enormous contribution to our multi-dimensional understanding of Morrison, while also speaking directly to our times, reminding us of the importance of goodness, imagination, vision, and moral clarity as we cultivate a worthy antidote to the evils that threaten to consume us.
"The publication of this extraordinary book could not have arrived at a more propitious moment. At a time when the country as a whole seems tormented by the corrosive presence of a new kind of evil that is trying to banish any memory, much less evidence, of its opposite, Goodness and the Literary Imagination reminds readers of evil’s opposite, but in forms that Morrison’s fiction renders again strange. Its publication should be treated as a major event; its contribution to American literary and religious studies is absolutely assured."
Toni Morrison’s 2012 Harvard Divinity School lecture—included as the first ten pages of this book—occasioned this remarkable collection of essays on the question of goodness and evil in Morrison’s canon. The essays Carrasco (Harvard Divinity School), Paulsell (Harvard Divinity School), and Willard (Boston College) have gathered look at many of Morrison’s works and cover the evolution and breadth of Morrison's career.... The collection as a whole offers a fascinating look at Morrison and at American literature and ethics more generally. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
Here, in these pages, we meet one of our greatest literary artists and thinkers, Toni Morrison, and a group of her most engaging interlocutors as they illuminate the centrality of 'goodness' in her oeuvre. Taking a backward glance at her life’s work, Morrison insists 'Writing and trying to find a language for goodness is all I’ve ever done in the novel.' Throughout she has given us characters who embody goodness and characters who acquire self-knowledge only through practicing it. This volume places her efforts in a context that best illuminates the moral, ethical and religious dimensions of her work. In so doing it provides an enormous contribution to our multi-dimensional understanding of Morrison, while also speaking directly to our times, reminding us of the importance of goodness, imagination, vision, and moral clarity as we cultivate a worthy antidote to the evils that threaten to consume us.
2019-07-28
The Nobel Prize-winning author's lecture at the Harvard Divinity School as well as a rich collection of scholarly illumination of the religious dimensions of her fiction.
In 2012, Morrison (The Source of Self-Regard: Essays, Speeches, Meditations, 2019, etc.) was invited to give the 95th annual Ingersoll Lecture at Harvard. Those exploring her work were not literary critics and scholars but a pan-disciplinary group of "scholars of religion, history, theology, and ethics." According to the editors' introduction, "Morrison's work has become a kind of sacred text, and reading her a spiritual practice for many." The close readings of her work in these critical essays build strong cases for such a focus while never subverting the purely literary value of her work or reducing it to theological dogma. Her lecture provides the starting point: "Goodness: Altruism and the Literary Imagination" shows how the novel, which once reflected a world in balance—"Dickens, Hardy, and Austen all left their readers with a sense of the restoration of order and the triumph of virtue"—has changed dramatically. Now, she writes, "Evil has a blockbuster audience; Goodness lurks backstage. Evil has vivid speech; Goodness bites its tongue." As these essays suggest, Morrison has addressed evil throughout her fiction and has steeped her work in it while also meeting its challenge with love and a spirit of redemption. "Religion and the religious dimensions of African American life permeate her novels, sometimes in Christian tones, sometimes in African tones, always through the strange stuff of existence," writes Davíd Carrasco in "The Ghost of Love and Goodness." A Mexican American historian of religion at Harvard, Carrasco provides a bookend to the lecture with his 2017 interview with Morrison, which reflects on the lecture and its themes and her powerful assessment of slavery as "the story [of] people who were treated like beasts [but] did not become beastly." Instead, they created "a culture that this country could not do without."
A volume that attests to Morrison's singularity, with a cultural resonance that extends well beyond literature.