Sunteți pe pagina 1din 25

IS THERE A BLACK KEY TO THE WHITE HOUSE?

EXPLORING AFRICAN AMERICAN


IDENTITY PORTRAITS THROUGH THE PEN OF AFRICAN AMERICANS
Whom do men say that I am?
Mark 8:27
INTRODUCTION
At a first glance, the quote from the Bible that opens this paper may seem out of place. The quote refers to
a moment, when Jesus, in the Bible, is confronted with identity crisis in the community, where he lived
and worked. In the light of this concern, on the way to Caesarea Philippi, Jesus questioned His disciples
about whom society believes He is. Various conflicting answers from the disciples indicate a
misrepresentation of Jesus identity in the community. The analogy I am making here is that the treatment
of the African-American life and characterin fact, identity crisis has been a concern for AfricanAmericans writers, in almost all the literary genres in the long sweep of African American history.
Furthermore, as we focus attention on the twenty-first century, it is also the time to examine just how far
we have come close to dissolving the African American identity crisis since the historical sociologist W.
E. B. Du Bois made his famous prediction that the twentieth century would be the century of the color
line. There have already been many such assessments, and there are undoubtedly many more to come but
the paradoxical ways in which ethnic identities are differentially perceived throughout history explains
the growing need to revisit the struggles and attempts of African American writers throughout ages to
overturn the identity politics through their writing. The concept of identity and its multiple association
with race makes it that it cannot be taken for granted (Gilroy, 2000, p. 97-98).
To speak of African American or black identity in this century we need to examine all that gave voice to
and authenticate black existence. These include slave narratives, personal histories, and spiritual or
secular autobiographical texts. These narratives bring us close to conditions of physical and/or mental
bondage or despair associated historically with the political, social, and economic environment
surrounding of the African American and hinders the attainment of their spiritual as well as physical
freedom. A casual observer of the development of African American literary traditions, therefore, will
certainly see autobiography, among other genres, standing out as a major component in the vast array of
cultural productions that deal with the issue of this identity politics. From Frederick Douglass narrative
(1845) to the Autobiography of Malcolm X (1964), and from Langston Hughes Big Sea (1940) to Toni
Morrisons Beloved (1987) and many more, autobiographical discursive practices are at the critical
crossroads of the theoretical, cultural, and historic implications of the writings. At the core of each of
these writings, especially the autobiographies, is the question of the subject and the first-person
speaking position. This stance offers any reader a first hand or personal account of experiences and a

thorough insight into the length and breath of the identity politics which calumniates into what W. E. B.
Du Bois calls the color line and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. adds his position on the issue, Why We
Cant Wait (King Jr. 964, p. 80).
I have always argued the fact that several authors articulate the African American identity crisis in their
works in the long sweep of African American history, yet there seems to be no definite answer. Literary
works that I currently want to draw upon are from four genres of African American literary tradition,
namely (1) Autobiography: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass, (2)
Fiction/Novel: Beloved by Toni Morrison, (3) Poetry: selections from Langston Hughes, Countee
Cullen, and Gwendolyn B. Bennett and, (4) Drama: A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry. The
selection of the above texts is grounded in the fact that they reflect the cultural relevance of the historical,
social, economic, and political dimensions of African-American identity crisis (Ladson-Billings, 1994).
These texts do not cover the entire historical periods, instead they are representative of the themes.
Theoretical sampling enables a researcher to make use of that which is definitive and useful, employ
boundaries that pinpoint the fit and relevance of the broad spectrum (Charmaz, 2000 in Denzin and
Lincoln, 2000) and in the end analyze the texts or whatever is selected by proofreading and underlining
key phrases that identify potential themes a researcher is working with (Agar, 1996; Bernard, 1994;
Bogdan & Biklen, 1992; Lincoln & Guba, 1985 quoted in Denzin and Lincoln 2000).
This study employs an interpretive framework using qualitative methods as a vehicle to uncover multiple
dimensions of the complex depth of African-American identity concerns in selected works/texts.
According to Sevigny (1981), the task of the qualitative methodologist is to capture what people say and
do (orally or written) as a product of how they interpret the complexity of their world. Strauss and Corbin
(1990) also claim that qualitative methods can be used to better understand any phenomenon with
multiple dimensions and about which much is yet to be known or written. This method, in the end, will
help me gain new perspectives about what is known, and more an in-depth information on things I can
hardly convey quantitatively.
Contexts for the Slave and Ex-Slave Narratives
An abolitionist is said to record in his memoir his asking a slave about the slaves self. The slave
responded, I aint got no self Without hesitation, the abolitionist responded to the black man, Slave are
you, Thats what I is the slave replied (Gates 1991, p. 7). The encounter between the abolitionist and
the slave can be summed up as, what Anthony Appiah (1996) refers to as the lack of a positive account
of black identity (p. 68). Appiah goes on to explain that if one follows the labels, Africans to
Negroes, Blacks to Colored Race to Afro-Americans then to African American something Du
Bois calls the badge of color (p. 68) it proves the case that there is never a consensus on what black
identity is (p. 68-69). Apart from the social effects of his crisis, it is imperative that a people denied

access to literacy and language will fail in the end to name themselves in their own words and terms; they
will unsuccessfully define their identity and hardly spell in words what makes them who they are. Thus,
the absence of the black self or identity definition in the law because of denials makes it imperative,
therefore, to forge a language, or a means that will bear testimony to the integrity of the black self and
expose all that delimit black identitystories, folklore, songs which eventually document their history.
According to Blackburn (1997), during slavery slaves were defined as private, alienable commodities and
their definition by race left them in the process of alienation and commodification (p 586). Allan Johnston
(1982) also observes that laws and customs confined the status and identity of the African American to a
chattel, one in bondage for life, the irrational being, while science theories identified him as a thing and
not a person. Since blacks were inferior, Allan Johnston goes on to say, they could never intermingle with
whites on basis of civil, political, or social equality (p. 19). Thus, skin color determined the individuals
identity, social value, political and economic options.
This imposed identity for the African American did not end with abolition of slaveryDu Bois refers to
it as the color line of the twentieth century. James Baldwin in a published conversation with Dan
Georgakas in late 1965, in Italy, also notes among other things that What has happened is that America
which used to buy and sell black men still isnt sure if they are animals or not (Chapman, 1968, p. 661).
In the light of this historical experience Gates (1991) observes that Deprived of access to literacy, the
tools of citizenship, denied the rights of selfhood by law, philosophy, and pseudo-science and denied as
well the possibility, even, of possessing collective history as a people, black Americanscommencing
with slave narratives in 1760published individual historiesin a larger attempt to narrate the collective
history of the race (p. 4). Thus, the putative relation between literacy and the quest for freedom led
men and women like Frederick Douglass to learn to write resulting in the narratives, which largely
question the Africans (now referred to as African Americans) place in nature, and place in the great
chain of beingidentity (Gates Jr. 1997).
NARRATIVE OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS
Leigh Gilmore (1973) reminds us in her essay, The Mark of Autobiography: Postmodernism,
Autobiography and Genre that we must view autobiographical texts as sites of identity production
they both resist and produce cultural identities (p. 4). It is within these parameters of production and
resistance that I will study Frederick Douglass narrative.
Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in 1817 and became a noted antislavery lobbyist, an eloquent
speaker, a newspaper editor and, in 1889, United States Minister to Haiti. Like the freedom fighters of
this century, Douglass grew impatient with the slow progress from court battles and politics, and sought
faster routes to equality and recognition of his identity as well as the African Americans identity (Gates,
1997). Throughout his life, Douglass wrote and argued against, not only slavery, but also the rights of

blacks to serve in the Civil War, the political and civil rights of women, and many other causes involving
human liberties.
Thus, the narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass is the story of one man's search for identity, freedom
and the fight for the emancipation of an entire people. It is depicted in traditional comic book serial-art
style, with vividly colored original illustrations
After crossing her hands, he tied them with a strong rope and led her to a stool under a
large hook in the joisther arms were stretched up full length, so she stood upon the
ends of her toes. He commenced to lay on the heavy cowskin, and soon the warm, red
blood (amid heart-rendering shrieks from her, and horrid oaths from him) came dripping
to the floor. I was terrified and horror-stricken at the sight
(Douglass, Narrativein Gates, 1997, p. 339)
This is a vivid graphic presentation of an African American womans miserable experience in slave-hood.
The intention here is not to arouse sympathy but to solicit empathy to the ordeal of integrating the woman
into the Order of things since slaves are already, by law, defined as things and not a person with rights
to self.
Notwithstanding this Frederick Douglass narrative opens with him tracing his life as a slave and fugitive,
to his rise as an educator and leader in the abolition of slavery:
I was born in Tuckahoe, near Hillsborough..
(Gates, 1997, p. 310)
The geographical locations Douglass provides are points of reference, sites of memory needed for the
construction of cultural identity. As if to open the reader to nature of slavery, and the slaves identity
problem Douglass states I have no accurate knowledge of my age, never having seen any authentic
record containing it. (Gates, 1997, p. 310)
Douglass did not personalize this. He quickly threw light on the fate of the entire slave kingdom when he
stated among other things By far the larger part of the slaves know little of their ages as horses know of
theirs, and it is the wish of most masters within my knowledge to keep their slave thus ignorant (p. 310).
We cannot lose sight of the fact that his being unable to trace his fathers identity let alone claim it or
define his personal identity led him to resentment, a restless spirit (p. 310) because he did not know his
birthday or his father. This knowledge is crucial to his identity because it will help redefine him as a
person and not as a thing in a community where skin color determines the individuals identity, social
value and economic options. Therefore, lack of knowledge of who he is (identity) invokes in him that
restless spirit and goads him into increasing defiance of the slave institution into which he was born.
Armed with no knowledge of his identity, no knowledge of his father, Douglass search for his identity
would be entirely based on how he perceives his manhood. In this quest, Frederick Douglass defined his

manhood through his education and his freedom. As a slave, he realized that the white man's power to
enslave the black man (p. 325) is to keep him illiterate or ignorant If you teach that nigger how to read,
there would be no keeping him. It would forever unfit him to be a slave. He wouldof no value to his
master (p. 325).
That power of enslavement will be through mental and physical enslavement. Hence, Douglass knew that
becoming literate would be the pathway from slavery to freedom (p.325) where he can define himself,
name the things around him in his own words, and express his experiences in his own terms. In effect, his
education would give him the mental freedom to gain physical freedom. His effort at becoming literate
took many forms. He occasionally bribed and befriended children in the neighborhood. To wit, Douglass
exploited every opportunity at his disposal to access viable ways of acquiring literacy. As a result, of his
persistence and eagerness, Douglass achieved mental emancipation hence, he was no longer an ignorant
nigger that was supposed to obey his master. (p. 325). By acquiring his education, he was halfway
through to getting the true freedom he wants physical emancipation.
To make up for this loss of identity Frederick Douglass establishes a keen sense of his regional identity as
a southern expatriate in the narrative (becoming one of the forerunners, quite literally, of more famous
literary southerners in the twentieth century who left the South to write in the North).
As a slave narrative of the antebellum era, it throws light over both the realities of slavery as an
institution, the identity and the humanity of black people as individuals deserving full human rights. An
essential component to this characteristic is that Frederick Douglass narrative (just like others) became
an I-witnesses account (Gates, 1997, 301) revealing the struggles, sorrows, aspirations, and triumphs of
a people in a compellingly personal story-telling manner. Like other slave narratives, Douglass story
privileges us to witness slavery as a condition of extreme physical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual
deprivation, a kind of hell on earth.
Very often, we are confronted with what essentializes Black Identity. Is it the individualsmen and
women involved or the acquisition of literacy? Nevertheless, it is evident here, that by gaining mental
emancipation Douglass managed to gain his selfhood/manhood. Through his acquisition of literacy, he
gained access to the power of knowledge that influences his literacy. Being able to read journals and
storybooks from other communities Douglass' eyes were opened to the dimensions of what slavery really
is. This broadened his scope of knowledge, brought him in contact with slave revolts across the world. In
one instance, he met with Sheridans mighty speeches (Gates, 1997, 328) and from The Columbian
Orator he got the sense of a slaves bold denunciation of slavery, and a powerful vindication of human
rights (Gate, 1997, 328). His response to reading of this journals and papers took a dramatic turn. He
interpreted texts in a way that he would have never have seen if he had remained illiterate. Douglass felt
all the horrors and sadness of his identity as a slave and became a displeased personality, a restless

spirit ready to react to the harsh realities that defined his identity (p. 316). He felt that his master, Master
Hugh, was right in making him, Douglass not learn to read and write. Douglass learning to read brought
him the discontentment, torment and anguish that Master Hugh said would follow if a slave learned how
to read (Gates, 1997, p. 325)
Douglass access to literacy made him draw from the well of his memory and translate the flashbacks into
the present in order to discover meaning of his life, his identity, which hitherto was veiled from him I
often found myself regretting my own existence and wishing myself dead; and but for my hope of being
free (p. 328)
Douglasss acquisition of knowledge did not only empower him, it frustrated him because literacy opened
doors to realities of his degradation and powerlessness:
I would at times feel that learning to read had
been a curse rather than a blessing. It had given
me a view of my wretched condition, without a
remedy. It opened eyes to the horrible pit, but to
no ladder upon which to get out. In my moments
of agony, I envied my fellow slaves for their
stupidity. I often wished myself a beast (p. 328).
He was also dissatisfied with his identity as he compared himself to a reptile: I preferred the condition of
the meanest reptile to my own. Anything, no matter what, to get rid of thinking! It was this everlasting
thinking of my condition that tormented me (p. 328). In these situations, Douglass saw the dehumanizing
effects of slavery on not only himself but all slaves. It brought him a latitude of pain, a depth of sadness
that he wanted to go back to the way he was, not to read anymore: As I writhed under it, I would at times
feel that learning is a curse rather than a blessing. It gave me a view of my wretched condition, without a
remedy (p. 328)
Douglass quest for freedom and identity continued to grow with agitation and to the point of being
unmanageable, when he was taken to a man named Covey, a renowned "nigger breaker". It was on the
plantation of Covey, that Douglass had his quest for freedom and identity, when his manhood was tested.
This is a quest he held tight in his loins for long, as a result, of his becoming literate. To Douglass, Covey,
the nigger breaker posses a threat to this quest much as Covey too was determined to take it away from
him his freedom and identity by the "bitterest dregs of slavery" (p. 339).
The journey to self-actualization, identity and freedom did not emerge as a gift. Douglass fight with
Covey offered him a chance of the rebirth of his manhood, the right to define his identity. He regained all
his aspirations to become physically empowered again to extricate himself from the web of identity
politics.

Through this Douglass saw how slavery has the ability to rob the very essence of a man by putting the
mind and the body into a mental and physical enslavement:
I found that, to make a contented slave it is
necessary to make a thoughtless one. It is
necessary to darken his moral and mental vision,
and, as far as possible, to annihilate the power of
reason. He must be able to detect no
inconsistencies in slavery; he must be made to
feel that slavery is right, and he can be brought to
that only when he ceases to be a man (p. 315),
In the end, the inner worlds that literacy revealed to Douglass gave him more strength to fight the system,
the authority invested in the slave-master to gain his freedomthe restoration of his identity.
Many characteristics and experiences have come to define the African American identity ever since
Douglass narrative. Even though times have changed throughout the years, as have the laws and the
privileges African Americans are yet to come to a full grip of their cultural identity. This concern
manifests itself as a central theme not only in Douglass narrative or other ex-slave narratives but also in
the diverse array of African-American literary traditions including dance, music, and works of art to date.
Frederick Douglass impulse to write his narrative as a documentation of his experiences is not a resolve
to escape some sort of personal crisis. Rather it is an individuals effort at exposing the dark clouds that
hover over the languishing soul of the slave(s), where their hope contends with despair of the spirit, and
endurance pleads with time on earth. Douglass narrative hereby constitutes a cultural force that seeks to
remold the diminished image of black representativeness what best institute black representative
identity and cultural memory. In fact, producing stories about our lives, makes it that people find
themselves sometimes peeping through the keyholes of doors that remain shut to them. It is like hanging
our mirrors, to paraphrase Virginia Wolf, in odd corners so that others can see what they were never
meant to see.
In many ways, Douglass narrative will look like an individual black man's personal struggles to attain
and define his freedom, his manhood or in broader terms his identity. Instead, we cannot escape
understanding that to protest the color line most effectively and originally, he had to personalize it, to
make its reality not merely a social and legal fact but a profound psychological factor in the African
Americans sense of self and relationship to society (Gates, 1997, p.607).

THE NOVEL AND THE ISSUE OF IDENTITY


Toni Morrisons search for identity through memory and history
The site of Memory is the number one place Toni Morrison insisted upon that modern African
American writers have a responsibility towards the past, and upon the necessity of ripping the veil
which has been drawn over certain facts pertaining to black experience (Fabre, 1994, p5). To Morrison,
when she examined slave narratives, the print origins of black literatureshe became aware of the
blanks left by those early authors considering the constraints under which they worked or wrote (Fabre,
1994, p. 5). This brought her to the point that The act of imagination is bound up with memory and only
the acts of imagination can help fill the blanks, reveal unheeded or the silenced aspects of African
American experience (Fabre, 1994, p. 5). Thus began her invention of a new literary tradition in Beloved.
Through this novel Morrison made efforts at exposing things too terrible to relate, probing into private
and interior lives of people who did not even write their stories for us to read. Thus, there is no
gainsaying that she seems to redefine the autobiographical genre.
In Beloved autobiography is tied to reproduction in a number of fascinating waysautobiography
becoming a transparent recount or reproduction of actual life events and fiction as a productive act that
engages a writers creative talents (Miller, 1997, p. 5).
If memory and history are essential in African American Culture then Ralph Ellison says it best Ask
your wife to take you around to the gin mills and barber shops .A whole unrecorded history is spoken
then, Brother (Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man). Toni Morrison also confirms the importance of memory
and history, It was not a story to pass on. So they forgot her. Like unpleasant dream during a troubling
sleepThey can touch it if they like, but dont, because they know things will never be the same if they
do (Beloved, p.275). As if to say African Americans are born knowing (to borrow this neighborhood
term) Cornel West, the contemporary philosopher, also adds his voice, In this nation infamous for its
brash will to historical forgetfulness, African Americans have been ones who could not forget: They have
been the Americans, who could not know (Fabre, 1994 p. 3).
In Beloved geographical locations were utilized as important sites of memory in the construction of
African American culture and identity. This is significant not because it creates a historical setting but
also it fosters connection to memory-generating experiences to emphasize the relationship between
memory and history. The novel opens by repeatedly exhibiting the symbolism of plants and trees
(Beloved, p. 3-5). Morrison employs these plants as points of reference in order to present the hardships
and suffering that the slaves at Sweet Home encountered, as well as the pain (the chamomile) that remains
in the lives of the former slaves due to continuous remembering of their bitter experiences. Sethe
remembers conversing with Baby Suggs about "letting yourself remember" her children (Beloved, p. 6).
Many a time Sethes memory is brought alive that she could not stop herself from remembering certain

things "She might be hurrying across a field...to get to the pump quickly and rinse the chamomile sap
from her legs" (Beloved, p. 6). Whereas chamomile may represent the things in her life of which she
would like to rid herself, there were also other things so bitter that she could not remember even if she
tried "Nor was the faintest scent of ink or the cherry gum and oak bark from which it was made. Nothing.
Just the breeze cooling her face as she rushed toward water" (Beloved, p. 6)
What we may gather from Sethes desire to get every last bit of sap off her is the sense of a soul searching
for space to live in freedom. Not even, her taking a shortcut across the field just to save a half-mile
salvaged her because she did not notice how high the weeds had grown until the itching was all the way to
her knees. This is the "breaking point" that many of the slaves probably reachedthe height that the
weeds had grown to is synonymous to the point of being fed up with the system she found herself.
Our memory is made to be dynamic through the dialectics of remembering and history resurrected from
forgotten graves when Morrison continuous to probe deep into Sethes inner self, There was not a leaf on
that farm that did not make her want to scream...It never looked as terrible as it was and it made her
wonder if hell was a pretty place too (Beloved, p.6).
While Sethe compares her plantation life to hell, she quickly reminds us, there are "...the boys hanging
from the most beautiful sycamore trees in the world (Beloved, p.6). What Morrison is doing here with
memory is not surprising because Harlon Dalton (1999) argues that in constructing Black racial
victimhood it should not be assumed that black men and women suffered equal racial abuse (Carbado,
1999, p. 120). Thus, it is argued that throughout history race, class, and gender have come to intersect to
confound and restrict Black womens lives so severely (Carbado, 1999, p. 54) that, only memory can
crystallize the secret, unspoken experiences in their lives and while the craft of creativity paint it in words
for the world to read.
On receiving her Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993, Toni Morrison said, "My work requires me to think
about how free I can be as an African-American woman writer in my genderized, sexualized, wholly
racialized world" (Permanent Secretary, Swedish Academy, 1993). If the novel Beloved is a text then it
retrieves for us memory and creates for us complex reminders of the history of motherhood.
Telling the story of motherhood and slavery
In Beloved, Morrison also portrays slavery as an obstacle to motherhood. Each of the women approached
the issue of motherhood relative to their individual distinct situations. Sethe is forced to murder her
daughter so that slavery will not overcome her. Slavery heretofore is in direct opposition to the ability of a
woman to function properly as a mother. Rather than leave her daughter to face slavery alone, Sethe does
what many would consider a deviant act in terms of motherhood. By providing this scene in Beloved, we
experience the unspeakable tragic impact of slavery on the socialization of children, which hitherto was
untold in earlier slave narratives. One of the reasons for families is the reproduction and rearing of

children yet mothers during slavery were torn from their infants long before lactation was over. Thus,
Toni Morrisons novel Beloved traces the evolution of African American historical experiences from
Africa to America and debates their inherited identity by interpreting and reinterpreting the African
Americans lived experiences, through the lens of a reconstructed memory.
According to Morrison Song of Solomon (1978) with its description of the black world in life and legend,
forms an excellent introduction to her other works. Morrison observes that Milkman Dead's quest for his
real self and its source reflects a basic theme in her novels. The Solomon of the title, the southern
ancestor, can to be found in the songs of childhood games, where His inner intensity had borne him back,
like Icarus, through the air to the Africa of his roots. This insight finally becomes Milkman's too. (The
Permanent Secretary, 1993)
Beloved therefore, continues to widen the themes and weave together the places and times as the network
of motifs. The combination of realistic notation and folklore paradoxically intensifies the credibility of the
experiences. There is enormous power in the depiction of Sethe's action to liberate her child from the life
she envisages for it (slavery, bondage), and the consequences of this action for Sethe's own life.
MEMORY AND IDENTITY
The idea of memories and remembering is important to the novel, because they make up the basis of who
the characters are in the novel. This can be shown with both Sethe and Paul D. They are both a product of
their slave experience each enduring their own hardships and pains. It is through their past experience that
they have become the person they are now, but their experiences have been so painful that they want to
block the past from their lives. They attempt to disremember the past as a way of coping with it. To them,
the past brings pain, and even through talking about the past, "the hurt was always there-like a tender
place in the corner of her [Sethe's] mouth that the bit left" (58). This does not seem to be a helpful
approach, though, because they are both haunted in a way by their past. Therefore, each is a slave to their
memory in the sense that they cannot get away from their past, and it is the past that dictates what they do
now.
There is a connection between memory and identity. The memory theory of identity is by far much more
popular than bodily identity theories in that we seem to have the intuition that our memories really are
who we are (we are identified with our "minds" and not our "bodies" in a dualistic kind of way). Many
people want to say that if we were to spontaneously lose all ability to remember our past experiences, we
would in fact become a different person. The idea of memory itself seems to be circular with identity
(included in the idea of my memory of something is the idea that it is MY memory, therefore it is I who
did it). Consequently, it is understandable why Sethe and Paul D are so tied to their pasts--their memories
make them who they are. It further enlightens why Sethe and Paul D are consistently trying to
disremember their pasts; they are trying to become new people: non-slave-people.

STORYTELLING
There is a connection between the techniques of storytelling and the content knowledge of history. Fables,
tall tales and legends have historical incidents as their inspiration. No one knows how long storytelling
has been going on, but 15 thousand to 25 thousand years ago, when early people painted the caves in
France and at around the same time, or possibly even earlier, ancestors of indigenous Australians painted
numerous images in the Kimberleys and although no one really know why they were painted, I believe
they were associated with storytelling. I believe that when people went into these places, they didn't just
look at the pictures, they told stories about them. For most of human history, storytellers told their stories
to relatively small groups of people who gathered around them and they told them from the point of
memory. Thus, Toni Morrison once said in a 1988 interview with PBS:
No one tells the story about himself or herself unless forced. They don't want to talk. They don't
want to remember. But when you say it, hear it, look at it, and share it, they are not only one,
they're two, and three, and four, you know? The collective sharing of that information heals the
individual -- and the collective."
By stating that this is not a story to pass alone, Morrison is saying "Hey! Your great-granddaddy wasn't a
slave! So you can't talk about 'em." By stereotyping her characters as typical preconceived slaves,
Morrison attempts to generalize about experiences which she herself has not experienced to perpetuate the
history of slavery; grasping for a hand extended in pity.
These are stories that are told not because they are entertaining, or because they are something, the
narrator wants known about him or herself. Rather, they are told as a form a catharsis, a way to come to
terms with what has happened by explaining, and thus understanding, the reality. This storytelling is not
about hanging on to the past, but rather about understanding it, accepting it, and moving on from it. We
can't let this story die. "Pass on" can mean to die. I thought it was more fitting to end the story with the
idea, "don't forget this." I also saw in an essay once that "pass on" could also be interpreted as "skipping."
You simply pass the story without trying to understand it. So, in this case Morrison is trying to tell her
audience not to ignore this story.
MOTHERHOOD AND SLAVERY
Slavery in essence acts an obstacle to motherhood. The way that each woman approaches the issue of
motherhood seems to be relative to each of her distinct situations. Sethe is forced to murder her daughter
so that slavery will not overcome her. Slavery acted in direct opposition to the ability of a woman to be a
proper mother. Rather than leave her daughter to face slavery alone, she does what many would consider
to be a deviant act in terms of motherhood. Both Sethe and Baby Suggs are maternal. Baby Suggs'
maternal characteristics are obvious. She is a truly loving and spiritual woman, who opened her heart to
the community. Sethe is maternal in her deep love of her children. Throughout her life, she put her

children's lives before her own. She considers them her best thing and they are put before all else. For
instance, she suffers greatly to provide her children with freedom and her milk. It is the act of the
nephews taking her milk, the milk for her children that forces her to escape slavery at all costs. It is
maternal to do the best that you can in order to care for your children. Sethe felt that the only way she
could keep her children away from a life of slavery was by acting in a way that appears non-maternal,
killing her own children as well as herself. However, Sethe believed she was doing the best for her
children. A life on the "other side" was seen as superior to a life of slavery. It is also important to note that
Sethe was not prepared to be a mother. She was extremely young. She was married at 14 and had four
children by the time she was 19. There were no other women around, besides Mrs. Gardener who had no
children, to teach her to be a mother or to help her.
The question in this novel, Morrison told PBS host Charlie Rose, was "Who is the Beloved? Who is the
person who lives inside us that is the one you can trust, who is the best thing you are. And in that instant,
for that segment, because I had planned books around that theme, it was the effort of a woman to love her
children, to raise her children, to be responsible for her children. And the fact that it was during slavery
made all those things impossible for her.
In the novel, Sethe and Baby Suggs take two completely different approaches to "motherhood". Although
Baby Suggs was not the best "mother" to her children, she is a good "maternal" person later on in her life.
Sethe on the other hand never really grasps what it is to be a "mother" at all. This is because of her
terrible experience due to her years as a slave and the terrible things that she experienced. Sethes answer
to "motherhood" is to take life away while Baby Suggs answer is to give back later once she is able to
deal with her feeling towards motherhood. I think Beloved's description of who I think to be her mother
reveals a major part of slavery's influence on motherhood. Beloved describes the woman on the slave ship
as "her face, which is mine." And then continues to say, "she took my face away there is no one to want
me to say me my name." Her mother would have been the one to want her and say her name, but she was
gone. Beloved shows how her mother was taken from her. Then there is Baby Suggs who cannot
remember her children. She is the next step in slavery destroying motherhood. She cannot afford to
become to close to the children that will be taken away from her. Then Sethe tries to break the destructive
power of slavery. She takes her children before it can take them. Sethe had a mother like Baby Suggs and
she wants more for her children.
COLOR SYMBOLISM
Color plays an important role in Beloved simply because of the fact that appreciating it is representative
of freedom. Sethe explains,
Now I know why Baby Suggs pondered color her last years. She never had time to see, let alone
enjoy it before. Took her a long time to finish with blue, then yellow, then green. She was well

into pink when she died. I don't believe she wanted to get to red and I understand why because
me and Beloved outdid ourselves with it (201).
There is a relationship between each individuals perception of color and possible emotions such
as what Baby Suggs is experiencing. Baby Suggs' deterioration coincided with her coming to the
realization that Halle, the only boy she had left, wasn't coming back to her. Denver refers to how she
never gave up, but Baby Suggs did. "Grandma Baby thought he was coming, too. For a while, she thought
so, then she stopped. I never did" (207). Then she started getting sick and becoming ambivalent about The
Clearing and her followers. Eventually she died. Coincidentally, at the end of the novel, Sethe covers
herself in the colorful quilt and refuses to leave her bed. I believe that this was caused not only by
Beloved's departure, but also the fact that she thought that if her daughter (whom she thought hated her)
returned to her, that maybe her boys would too. But now that she only has Denver left, and even she is
venturing out into the real world -- "as Denver's outside life improved, her home life deteriorated" (250) -and becoming not-so-dependent upon Sethe.
So, from colors, and the appreciation of them, ex-slaves can find eternal happiness. Ultimately, they
realize they have the Freedom to enjoy them, whereas before they never discovered the beauty of color,
nor the fact that they had the right to appreciate them at all. I think that color in the novel is a parallel to
love, in many ways. Color is something that is experienced by beloved, Sethe, and baby Suggs in the
novel, and it is something that they think about a lot. All three also change their views of color throughout
the book, as different things happen to them and they must readjust their views of the world.
Just as it is a privilege of the free to love, so it is also a privilege of freedom to appreciate the world and
look at the beauty of color that occurs there. The enjoyment of color is a manifestation of an appreciation
for the world that only a free person can experience. Much the same is true of love. As Paul D. and Baby
Suggs both know, a slave is not free to love. It is dangerous to love any one thing, because everything can
be taken away from one who is merely property. Thus, Baby Suggs does not appreciate color until later in
her life, until a time when she is free to love as well.
And just as Sethe's love is "too thick", So too does her attachment to color become too strong, too heavyhanded. At the end of the book, when the love between Sethe and beloved is clearly a destructive force,
the two become obsessed with gaudy, carnival colored dresses. the more confused their situation and their
love, the flashier the colors in their clothes and their house.
Another example of the tie between color and love is Sethe's colorblindness with the burial of beloved.
with the loss of beloved, and the end of Sethe's ability to see color, so too comes the end of Sethe's
violent, too thick love. Or at least it takes a hiatus until the return of beloved, eighteen years later. Denver
never seems to be loved the way that beloved is, although this is possibly only because Denver is not the
focus of the novel the way beloved is. Still, the loss of the thing Sethe loved the most, and the

simultaneous loss of her ability to see color, seem to suggest a connection between the things and people
she loves, and love itself, and color.
The color Red has special significance, as it is one that is traditionally associated with both love and war
and violence. In the novel, it is tied to both. Paul D. cries out red heart after sleeping with beloved. He
both has made love to her and feels that she has done him terrible violence. Red clearly had negative
connotations for Baby Suggs, as she seemed to want to die before she had to think about red.
In all of these ways, color and love seem to be intricately connected to each other, and both are clearly
tied to issues of freedom in the book. Color is a privilege available only to the free, just like love. And it
is a powerful way to see and define the world, just as love is. Also, color in its extreme (at the end of the
book) is dangerous, just like Sethes too-thick love.
THEME OF LOVE
The theme of "Love" is important to the novel Beloved when we consider why the different characters are
being accused of loving "too much" or having love that is "too thick." We also have to understand why it
is that Paul D (among others) recommends loving everything a little bit in a "spread out" kind of way is
important so that one can always have something to fall back on if one thing you love is taken from you.
This explains why it is suggested in the novel that loving one thing too much is dangerous. For Morrison,
Love is the binding force within the black slave community. Amidst all the injustice, pain, and suffering;
there is the heart, the will to live, that drives the slaves on to endure and not just fold under all the burden.
Also, a heavily suggested theme with regards to love, is the relationship between families in the black
community. As mentioned, Paul D recommends not to love too much so that if a love is lost, there is still
love on reserve to fall back on. Take the example of Sethe: all those children without a father-abandoned.
For if she were to love too much, the burden would have been too great, too much of a life-blow. Stripped
of their humanity by the white man, the black community is left to ration out their love in hopes that, in
loss, they will survive. To have your love broken (as with the case of Halle in the barn) is an un-carriable
weight, a burden that Toni Morrison painfully writes was endured by millions of slaves.
THE TITLE BELOVED: ROMAN 9:25
The quotation from Paul's letter to the Romans foreshadows the salvation found throughout this novel
for the black race as a whole, for Beloved temporarily, and finally for Sethe and most of all Denver.
When Paul wrote his letter, it was directed mainly at the Jewish Christians in Rome, those who believed
in Christ but did not believe that Gentiles could share in the resurrection they believed he promised. They
felt that the Gentiles were an un-chosen, hopeless lot who, because they followed different traditions, did
not deserve the grace bestowed by Jesus Christ and the Jewish god, Yahweh. We can quickly distinguish
that the attitude of whites was probably much the same in the period of slavery. As Morrison describes it,
men like schoolteacher believed that their slaves had "animal characteristics" and treated them in

accordance. So what better analogy for the freedom of the slaves to be human than the freedom of the
Gentiles to be Christian? "I will call them my people which were not my people." Or we will
acknowledge them people, which were not people.
The second half of the quotation that Morrison selects says "[I will call] her Beloved, who was not
beloved." With this statement, Morrison alludes to the salvation that surrounds the stories of Beloved,
Sethe, and Denver. First, we can see the attempts of Sethe to right the wrongs she has done her daughter.
The act of killing was deemed unloving by the rest of the community, so Sethe tries to undo her unlove by
"calling her Beloved", or accepting her dead daughter back in life and giving her every piece of herself.
The women in the community also try to make up for the way they have treated Sethe and, by proxy,
Denver. They try to undo their unlove by "calling [Sethe] Beloved", and driving her dead daughter away.
But the greatest undoing occurs with what the community does for Denver. They "call [Denver]
Beloved", and accept her graciously into the world, thus giving her the greatest freedom from the ties that
had bound her, the fear of her mother and the ghost of her sister.
So on many levels, this quotation from Romans 9:25 is representative of Toni Morrison's story. It is a
novel about salvation from oppression whether that be in the form of a whip or a dead baby girl's love.
Denver's freedom and Sethe's freedom can then be seen as a microcosm of the greater freedom of the
slaves. To get that monkey of their back, to break the chains, to become his people, to achieve salvation.
Not the ultimate salvation, but still a salvation.
It has been argued that the quest for memory is search for history (Fabre, 1994, p. 19). Beloved opened
with detailed recollections of history and geographical areas. It assumes the tone of orality, a storytelling
session offering graphic descriptions and establishes a sense of what womanhood, motherhood is all
about. In a PBS interview some time ago in 1988, I remember, Morrison asked the PBS host Charlie
Rose, "Who is the Beloved? Who is the person who lives inside us that is the one you can trust? In this
interview Toni Morrison reiterated the fact that, no one tells a story about himself or herself unless
forced. They don't want to talk. They don't want to remember. But when you say it, hear it, look at it, and
share it, they are not only one, they're two, and three, and four. The collective sharing of that information
heals the individual -- and the collective. Thus, at the end of the novel Beloved, she emphasizes
collective identitythis is not a story to pass on alone. To Morrison, the story must be told not because it
is entertaining, or because it is something, the narrator wants known about him or herself. Rather, they are
told as a form a catharsis, a way to come to terms with what has happened by explaining, and thus
understanding, the reality. Remembering and storytelling is not about hanging on to the past, but rather
about understanding it, accepting it, and moving on from it.

POETRY AND IDENTITY: WHAT IS AFRICA TO ME


When we begin to look for other strategies of recollection that have been employed by African Americans
to transmit, their identity poetry and drama come to mind. Through these two media African American
heritage is retained and transmitted like other literary genres. One of the poets, who capture the spirit of
identity is Langston Hughes. Hughes is one of the early artists who were drawn to Harlem at a time when
Harlem promised to be the focus of African American cultural activity. His poem The Negro Speaks of
Rivers (Gates, et. all, 1997, p. 1254) depends on the psychological aspects of memory to critically
analyze history. He calls on disremembered time:
Ive known rivers:
Ive known rivers ancient as the world and older
than the flow of human blood in human veins.
My soul has grown deep like rivers. (Gates, et. all,
1997, p. 1254)
Hughes reconstructs what no longer physically exist except in memory to historically connect himself to
an identity which stories might have given him. By identifying geographical locations, I bathed in the
Euphrates when dawns were young. I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. I looked upon
the Nile and raised pyramids above it (p. 1254)
Hughes pinpoint sites viable in the construction of his identity. He connects his umbilical-chord to
famous sites, which offer him a sense of identity, family, intimacy, a name and personality. He goes
further to muse over the loss of this virtues when states,
I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe
went down to New Orleans, and Ive seen its
muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset
Ive known rivers
Ancient, dusky rivers
My soul has grown deep like the rivers (p. 1254).
What we might get from these names and geographical sites is the sense of change in history for, not only
Langston Hughes, but also for the African American community. What is essential in Hughes writings
and those other writers like him is the melancholic exposition of colonial violation of a peoples right to
themselves and the process to a cultural recovery is searching memory for what is lost in history. If
memory is invoked the community will take charge of its own life and identity by celebrating their
identity.

To do this Hughes suggests the elimination of the self from mental slavery and celebrate the landmarks of
black culture and provoke active participation in history. In a taunting voice, he reminds himself and all
America:
I, too, sing America
I am the darker brother,
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When the company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.
Through the affirmation of lived experiences will come changes:
Tomorrow,
Ill be at the table
When company comes
Nobody ll dare
Say to me,
Eat in the kitchen,
Then,
Besides,
Theyll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed. (p. 1260)
The works of Hughes establish the place of memory as the source of connection to ancestry. They
function as reminder of the fact of historical origin and acknowledgement of that origin regardless of the
disruption and genealogical distance. The call to maintain, and increase the quest with all symbolic
importance is manifested in:
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
Like a raisin in the sun
Or fester like a sore
And then run? (Gates, 1997, p. 1267)
Hughes is not the only person who made this call. Countee Cullen is described as one mostly preoccupied
with black identity (Gates, et. all, 1997, p. 1303). His poems go a long way to confirm the subversive
length artists went to preserve the past, not only of themselves, but also of the African American
population. A famous line from his poems:

Yet do I marvel at this curious thing:


To make a poet black, and bid him sing!
greets him as one who mirrored enduring truths about the psychological state of many African
Americans (Gates, 1997, p. 1305) In the poem, Heritage he examines the presence of racial ancestry
with considerable irony and surprise (Fabre, 1994, p. 23).
What is Africa to me:
Copper sun or scarlet sea,
Jungle star or jungle track,
Strong bronze men, or regal black
Women from whose loins I sprang
When the birds of Eden sang? (Gates, et. all,
1997, p. 1311)
Regardless what we bring to this poem we must not forget the constant but powerful subsequent clichs
of African Warrior O my beautiful black woman in the rest of the verses which predominantly invoke
racial memory and glorifies a heritage similar to negritude poetry of Aime Cesaire and Leopold Sedar
Senghor. The poem has recharged the word Africa with intense meaning and by pronouncing it invokes
its cultural authority and memory. The same applies to Langston Hughes who has never traveled to Africa
yet he muses in The Negro Speaks of Rivers. According to Melvin Dixon, (in Fabre, 1994) Cullen
attempts to counter the stereotypical and received images with the overwhelming urge to amnesia brought
on by conversion to Christianity (p. 4). He confronts Africa with the heart of a converted Christian yet
there is a dilemma when we hear nature intervenes as if to question him about his forgetfulness and
identity (p. 4). In an old remembered way; Rain works on me night and day (Gates, 1997, p. 1313 line:
83-84). To confront this dilemma in which he finds himself and discover his identity he must work on his
memory:
One thing only must I do:
Quench my pride and cool my blood
Lest a hidden ember set
.
They and I are civilized (Gates, et. all, 1997, p. 1314)
Another African American poet employs metaphors of remembering is Gwendolyn B. Bennett, a poet,
artist and journalist of the Harlem Renaissance. She is keenly aware of the grace and loveliness of people
of African descent, especially women, and girls (Gates, et. all, 1997, p. 1227). Her poetry quietly
celebrated the physical and emotional qualities not always appreciated by blacks themselves in time of

intense segregation (Gates, et. all, 1997, p. 1227). In the poem, To a Dark Girl Gwendolyn celebrates
the black identity
I love you for your brownness
And the rounded darkness of your breast

something of old forgotten queens


lurks in the lithe abandon of your walk
and something of the shackled slave (Gates, et.
all, 1997, p. 1228).
She defines the sum total of the cultural value in the black world, especially of women and girls, which
hitherto has been forgotten in days of segregation. The repeated use of forgotten, forgetting provokes
her confrontation of dual racial heritage in the absence of memory during segregation. She did not
vacillate between acceptance and rejection of ancestry as Countee Cullen. She affirms her identity with a
scorn at Fate for the troublesome past:
And let your full lips laugh at Fate! (Gates, et. all,
1997, p. 1228).
In calling on memory to bring back history of the proud ancestry of womanhood and beauty she affirms
her ancestry through gender and celebrating gender through ancestry (Fabre, 1994, p. 26).
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, it is important to observe that slave and ex-slave narratives are important not only for what
they tell us about African American history and literature, but also because they reveal to us the
complexities of the dialogue between whites and blacks in the last two centuries, particularly for African
Americans. This dialogue is implicit in the very structure of the antebellum slave narrative, which
generally centers on an African American's narrative but is prefaced by a white-authored text and often is
appended by white authenticating documents, such as letters of reference attesting to the character and
reliability of the slave narrator himself or herself. Modern black autobiographies such as Richard Wright's
Black Boy (1945) and The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) among others testify to the influence of
the slave narrative on the first-person writing of post-World War II African Americans. Beginning with
Margaret Walker's Jubilee (1966) and extending through such contemporary novels as Ernest J. Gaines's
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971), Sherley Ann Williams's Dessa Rose (1986), Toni
Morrison's Beloved (1987), and Charles Johnson's Middle Passage (1990), the "neo-slave narrative" has
become one of the most widely read and discussed forms of African American literature.
According to Du Bois (1903), one ever feels his twoness - an American, a Negro; two souls, two
thoughts, two un-reconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone

keeps it from being torn asunder. The history of the American Negro is the history of this strife,- this
longing to attain self-conscious manhood (identity), to merge his double self into a better and truer
self(p. 215). Fish (1980) mentions among other things that interpretive strategies guide all forms of
perception and interpretation (p.16) and a readers interpretive strategies give texts their shape (p.180).
Fish (1980) further affirms readers as the ones that make meaning, but maintains that, meaning, in the
form of culturally derived interpretive categories, make readers (p. 336). To this end, meaning is
impacted upon by the sociopolitical and cultural background of the reader as well as how the text is read.

Works Cited
Agbemabiese, Padmore. (1999). Looking Homeward: The Good Things I Have Heard Told. A Manuscript
Andoh-Kumi, Kingsley (1997). Language Policy for Primary Schools: Qui Vadimus? In Kropp
Dakubu, M. E. (Ed.). Teaching English in Ghana, A Handbook for Teachers Workshop Papers.
Cape Coast: Cape Coast University Press.
Anyidoho, Kofi, (1992). Language and Development Strategy in Pan African National Languages. In
Research in African Literatures. Bjornson, Richard. Ed. Spring 1992, Vol. 23, No. 1, Indiana:
Indiana University Press
Applebee, Arthur N. (1976). Tradition and Reform in the Teaching of English: A History. Illinois:
National Council of Teachers of English
Balogun, Odun F. (1997). Ngugi and African Postcolonial Narrative: The Novel as Oral Narrative in
Multigenre Preformance. Quebec: World Heritage Press
Bamgbose, Ayo (1976). Mother Tongue Education: The West African Experience. Paris: The UNESCO
Press (p. 7).
Biobaku, S. O. (1982). Local LanguagesThe Depository of Peoples Cultural Heritage. In The
National language. Ed. Bashir Ikara.(1982). Lagos: The national Language Center, p. 76-84
Birnie, J. H. and Ansre G. (1969). Ed. Proceedings on the Conference on the Study of Ghanaian
Languages. Accra: Ghana; also see Drum Beat July-September, 1987. Accra: Ghana Institute of
Linguistics, Literacy and Bible Translation, p. 3.
Blackburn, R (1997).

The Making of New World Slavery: From Baroque to Modern 1492 to 1800.

London: Verso
Bobbitt, Franklin. (1924). How to Make a Curriculum. New York: Houghton
Cant Wait. NY: Penguin Group
Carbado, Devon W. Ed. (1999). Black men on Race, Gender and Sexuality. NY: New York University
Press
Carey-Web, Allen (2001). Literature and Lives: A Response-Based, Cultural Studies Approach to
Teaching English. Urbana: National Council of Teachers of English
Chapman, Abraham. Ed. (1968). Black Voices: An Anthology of Africa-American Literature. NY: A
Signet Classic
Cohn, B. (1996). Colonialism and its Forms of Knowledge. Princeton, N J: Cambridge University Press
Cox, Carole and Many Joyce Ed. (1992). Reader Stance and Literary Understanding: Exploring the
Theories and Research and Practice. New Jersey: Ablex Publishing Corporation.

Cox, Susan Taylor. (1992). Perspectives on Stance in Response to Literature: A Theoretical and
Historical Framework. In Reader Stance and Literary Understanding: Exploring the Theories
and Research and Practice. New Jersey: Ablex Publishing Corporation.
David W. Blight, (1993). Ed. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by
Himself. Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press
Denzin, N. K and Lincoln Y. S. (2000). Ed. Handbook of Qualitative Research 2nd Edition. NY: Sage
Publications, Inc.
Douglass, Frederick. (1987). Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, in The Classic Slave
Narratives, ed. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. New York: Penguin Books
Du Bois, W. E. B. (1930). Souls of Black Folk. In Gates, H. L Et. al. Ed.(1997) The Norton Anthology
of African American Literature. New York: W. W. Norton & Company
Dzameshie, Alex K. (1988). Language Policy and the Common Language Controversy in Ghana. In
Research Review. MS 4.2, 1988
Fabre, Genevieve. Et al. Ed. (1994). History & Memory in African-American Culture. NY: Oxford
University Press
Gates H. L. Ed. (1991). Bearing Witness: A Selection from African American Autobiography in the
Twentieth Century. NY: Pantheon Books
Gates, H. L Et. al. Ed. (1997) The Norton Anthology of African American Literature. New York: W. W.
Norton & Company
Gbedemah, F. F. K. (1975). Alternative Language Policies for Education in Ghana. New York: Vantage
Press
Gilmore, Leigh. (1994). The mark of Autobiography: Postmodernism, Autobiography, and the Genre.
Autobiography and Postmodernism. Ed. Kathleen Ashley, Leigh Gilmore, and Gerald peters,
Amherst: Univ. of Massachusetts Press
Gilroy, Paul (2000). Against Race: Imagining Political Culture beyond the Color Line. Cambridge: The
Belknap Press of Harvard University
Harmond-Early, C. S. (2000). Examining Student Responses to Multiethnic Literature in Composition
classroom: A Micro-Ethnographic Approach. Ann Arbor: A Bell & Howell Company
Harris Violet, Ed. (1997). Using Multiethnic Literature in K-8 Classroom. Norwood: Christopher-Gordon
Publishers, Inc.
Holland, N. Norman. (1968). The Dynamics of Literary Response. New York: Oxford University Press.
Hornby, Peter Ed. (1977). Bilingualism, Psychological, Social and Educational Implications. New York:
Academic Press (Chapter 1, Bilingualism: An introduction and overview)

Hughes, Langston. (1932). Dream Keeper in The Dream Keeper and Other Poems. Illustrated by Helen
Sewell. New York: Knopf
Hymes, Dell. (1967). Models of the Interaction of Language and Social Setting. In McNamara Ed.
Problems of Bilingualism. New York: Harper Row
Irele, Abiola. (1981). The African Experience in Literature and Ideology. London: Heinemann
Isola, Akinwumi. (1992). The African Writers Tongue. In Bjornson, Richard. Ed. Research in African
Literatures. Spring 1992, Vol. 23, No. 1, Indiana: Indiana University Press
Johnston, Allan (1982). Racism in America: The Scientific Contribution to the Nineteenth-Century Race
Debate. Victoria: Deakin University Press
King Jr., M. L. (1964)

Letter from Birmingham Jail Why We

Kunene, Daniel. (1992). African-Language Literature: Tragedy and Hope. In Research in African
Literatures. Bjornson, Richard. Ed. Spring 1992, Vol. 23, No. 1, Indiana: Indiana University
Press
Ladson-Billings, Gloria (1994). The Dreamkeepers: Successful Teachers of African American Children.
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass A Wiley Company.
Langer, Judith. (1995). Envisioning Literature: Literary Understanding and Literature Instruction. New
York: Teachers College Columbia University
Mazrui, Alamin. (1992). Relativism, Universalism, and the Language of African Literature. In
Bjornson, Richard. Ed. Research in African Literatures. Spring 1992, Vol. 23, No. 1, Indiana:
Indiana University Press
McWilliam, H. O. A. (1964). The Development of Education In Ghana: An Outline. Accra: Longman
Merryfield, Merry M. Why Arent Teachers being prepared to Teach for Diversity, Equity and Global
Interconnectedness? A Study of Lived Experiences in Making of Multicultural and Global
Educators. In Teaching and Teacher Education. Elsevier Science Ltd. Vol. 16, 2000, p. 429-430
Mifflin Company. Cited by Arthur Applebee in Tradition and Reform in the Teaching of English Chapter
4 p. 83
Miller, F. MaryKay (1997). My Mothers/My Selves: (Re) Reading a Tradition of West African
Womens Autobiography. In Research In African Literatures. Indiana: Indiana University Press.
Vol. 28, No: 2, Summer 1997
Ministry of Education, (1996). Education Commission Report 1996. Accra: Ministry of Information
Morrison, Toni. (1994). The Nobel Lectures in Literature. NY: Knopf
Ngugi wa Thiongo. (1986). Decolonising the Mind. London: Heinemann
Otoo, S. K. (1969). The Bureau of Ghana languages: Its Operations and Difficulties. In Birnie, J. H. and
Ansre G. (1969). Ed. Proceedings on the Conference on the Study of Ghanaian Languages.

Accra: Ghana; also see Drum Beat July-September, 1987. Accra: Ghana Institute of Linguistics,
Literacy and Bible Translation, p. 43.
Owusu, Martin. (1983). A Drama of the Gods: A Study of Seven African Plays. Roxbury: Omenana
Owusu, Martin. (1983). A Drama of the Gods: A Study of Seven African Plays. Roxbury: Omenana
Permanent Secretary (The), Swedish Academy (1993). Press release: Nobel Prize for Literature, October
7
Purves, Allan, Soter, A, Rogers Theresa Ed. (1990). How Porcupines Make Love 11: Teaching RespondCentered Literature Curriculum. New York: Longman
Rabinowitz, P. J. and Smith M. W. (1998). Authorizing Readers: Resistance and Respect in Teaching of
Literature. New York: Teachers College Columbia University
Richards, I. A. (1929) Practical Criticism. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World
Richter, David H. Ed. (1998). The Critical Tradition: Classic Texts and Contemporary Trends. Second
Edition. Boston: Bedford Books
Rosenblatt, Louise M. (1978), The Reader, The Text, The Poem: The Transactional Theory of Literary
Work. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press
Rosenblatt, Louise M. (1985). The Transactional Theory of Literary Work. In C. R. Cooper (Ed.)
Researching Responses to Literature of The Teaching of Literature: Points of Departure. (pp. 3353). Norwood: NJ: Ablex Publishing Corp.
Rosenblatt, Louise M. (1995), Literature as Exploration. Fifth Edition. New York: Modern Language
Association
Said, Edward W. (1978). Orientalism. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul Simon, David et al, (1995).
Structural Adjusted Africa: Poverty, Debt and Basic Needs. London: Pluto Press
Singh, J. (1996). Colonial Narratives/Cultural Dialogues: Discoveries of India in the Language of
Colonialism. London: Routledge.
Smock, D. R. and Bentsi-Enchill, K. Ed. (1976). The Search for National Integration in Africa, New
York: The Free Press
Soter, Anna, Rogers Theresa Ed. (1997) Reading Across Cultures: Teaching Literature in a Diverse
Society. New York: Teachers College Columbia University
Soter, Anna. (1985). Writing: A Third Language for Second Language Learners, A Cross-Cultural
Discourse Analysis of Writing of School Children in Australia. Dissertation. Urban-Champaign:
University of Illinois
Soter, Anna. (1999) Young Adult Literature and The New Literary Theories. New York: Teachers
College Columbia University

Steffensen, J. S., Joag-Dev, C. and Anderson R. C. (1979)

A Cross Cultural perspective on

Reading Comprehension. Reading Research Quarterly, 15 (1), 10-29


Tompkins, J. (1994). Reader-Response Criticism: From Formalism to Post-Structuralism. Baltimore: The
John Hopkins University Press
UNESCO/OAU (1968). Conference on Education and Scientific and Technical Training in Relation to
Development in Africa. Nairobi, Kenya. Pan-Africa Journal. New York: UNESCO
Winston, Cynthia E. (1997). African American Identity and the Psychological Well-Being of Adolescents:
A Multidimensional Approach. Dissert. The Univ. of Michigan.
Yates, Rachel (1995).

Functional Literacy and the Language Question. International Journal of

Educational Development. Great Britain: Elsevier Science Ltd. Vol. 15. No. 4 UNESCO (1972).
The Role of Linguistics and Sociolinguistics in Language Education and Policy. Ed/WS/286.
Paris: UNESCO

S-ar putea să vă placă și