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Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Reading Morrison


Our African American Literature class began reading Toni Morrison's 1973 novel Sula.  Now, Morrison's work is important on several levels, and certainly one of them is that she consistently creates works that center on the lives, experiences, and histories of African American individuals and communities.  As noted by Professor Howard Rambsy II at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Morrison's texts are regularly cited in the productions by literary scholars and appear on the syllabi of various literature courses. But how does Morrison's popularity translate in the classroom?

"Morrison is hard."  I have heard this many times from students in response to reading novels and essays by the prize-winning author.  This is understandable given the backgrounds of most college-level students - their literary careers in high school and beyond don't often include experience with Morrison's work for different reasons; her texts have been banned in some schools due to ostensibly controversial subject matter, the state curriculum and testing standards have resulted in less reading overall in high school classrooms, and there is the old and problematic notion (overtly or covertly stated by teachers, professors, school boards, administrators, etc.) that only works by the outdated 'canon' are important - this canon has historically been dominated by privileged white men.

When I ask students if they have read works by Shakespeare, Fitzgerald, or Hawthorne, by and large they respond in the affirmative.  But, ask about Morrison, Octavia Butler, Gloria AnzaldĂșa, James Baldwin, or Leslie Marmon Silko?  No.  Students shake their heads and sometimes assume that because they've never heard about or read these authors, they must not be all that important.  This underlying notion that some texts are important while others are not impacts how students approach a novel, story, or memoir and what these young minds understand as valuable.

Yes, Morrison is hard for students who have not been able to experience literature outside of this very white, very male canon.  Her texts are non-linear and establish the importance and relevance of African American men and women within Black communities.  For Black students reading literature who have been inundated with writing by white authors, this is key.  Ultimately students begin to appreciate how incredibly descriptive, insightful, and even how shocking Morrison's texts can be - "did you read the part where Eva kills Plum!?" and "Morrison is playing with language.  Down is up, up is down, and the Bottom in Medallion is the top!"

Morrison's work moves from indecipherable in some ways to a puzzle students want to work through.  They begin to dig into her stories, looking for ways the author creates impossible situations, word play, vivid imagery, beautiful language, and how she creates the lives and histories of empowered and complicated Black characters who love and live deeply.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Black Poetry Favorites


Over the past few weeks, our African American Literature class has worked on the poetic productions by Black artists in the US.  Now, as a person who spent much of her life feeling afraid of poetry, I certainly felt for my students in those first few days.  They were sure that each poem had a "right" and "wrong" analysis, and they were convinced their readings were "wrong."  Together, we have overcome some of those assumptions about ourselves as readers and new poetry scholars.

Students presented their ideas in short presentations about various Black authors, including Nikki Giovanni, Carolyn Rodgers, Amiri Baraka, Haki Madhubuti, Kevin Young, and Elizabeth Alexander. Though initially nervous, many students began to dig their poets, or gained a new appreciation of a piece based on the presentation of a classmate.  We'll share some of those student ideas on the blog in the future, but I asked students to take a moment to reflect on their favorite poem last week.  Below are a few responses:

Mario - "We Real Cool" (by Brooks).  It was simple, but also deep!!! Like the message was powerful.

Iriana - "Don't Cry, Scream" (by Madhubuti). I like how (Madhubuti) prepared his thoughts together throughout the poem.  I like his story... After listening to the audio I truly heard what he meant."

Dana - "The Last M.F." (by Rodgers) is my favorite.  A strong woman will not be controlled by anyone.  If a woman bows down to anyone, it makes her weak.  The poem uses the word muthaf*cka TEN times to protest to being told how to act."

Chelsea - It was difficult to choose but "Dope" had to be my favorite.  Baraka's ability to be intentional about who he's addressing.  Without a desire to caress the abandonment of guilt, he plunges forward to address the ugliest of uglies to whomever is open to read his work."

Cameka - "Ego Tripping" (by Giovanni).  This poem depicts a person who is confident with where they are from, what they look like, their history, etc.  It makes me feel happy when I read it.  (Every time).