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Overview

In this startling group memoir, four friends—black and white, gay and straight, immigrant and American-born—use Toni Morrison’s novels as a springboard for intimate and revealing conversations about the problems of everyday racism and living whole in times of uncertainty. Tackling everything from first love and Soul Train to police brutality and the Black Lives Matter movement, the authors take up what it means to read challenging literature collaboratively and to learn in public as an act of individual reckoning and social resistance.
 
Framing their book club around collective secrets, the group bears witness to how Morrison’s works and words can propel us forward while we sit with uncomfortable questions about race, gender, and identity. How do we make space for black vulnerability in the face of white supremacy and internalized self-loathing? How do historical novels speak to us now about the delicate seams that hold black minds and bodies together?
 
This slim and brilliant confessional offers a radical vision for book clubs as sites of self-discovery and communal healing. The Toni Morrison Book Club insists that we find ourselves in fiction and think of Morrison as a spiritual guide to our most difficult thoughts and ideas about American literature and life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299324940
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 02/04/2020
Edition description: 1
Pages: 208
Sales rank: 1,048,581
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Juda Bennett is a professor of English at The College of New Jersey and the author of Toni Morrison and the Queer Pleasure of Ghosts and The Passing Figure. Winnifred Brown-Glaude is an associate professor of African American studies and sociology at The College of New Jersey and the author of Higglers in Kingston: Women’s Informal Work in Jamaica. Cassandra Jackson is a professor of English at The College of New Jersey and the author of Violence, Visual Studies, and the Black Male Body and Barriers between Us: Interracial Sex in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction. Piper Kendrix Williams is an associate professor of English and African American studies at The College of New Jersey and the coeditor of Representing Segregation: Toward an Aesthetics of Living Jim Crow, and Other Forms of Racial Division.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Book Club Meets 3

Cassandra's Secret 13

Not Today, Motherf#@$ 19

Why Black Folks Go Crazy 38

Judo's Secret 63

Dangerous Music 68

Funny White People 84

Winnie's Secret 105

Black Life and the Dead Deer 111

On Guns and Apples 129

Piper's Secret 144

Too Many White Guys 149

Harriet Tubman's Shawl 166

Epilogue: A Letter to Toni Morrison 181

Afterword 186

Acknowledgments 189

Sources 192

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