Community outlaw : surviving persecution in Sula and Jazz.
This essay explores how Toni Morrison’s “Sula” and “Jazz” present the black community and its pariahs. Oppressed by the whites, the black community manifests the same oppression it has received on selected members of the black community. These marginal members’ refusal to conform to the traditional...
Main Author: | Wong, Jia Ru. |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Andrew Corey Yerkes |
Format: | Final Year Project (FYP) |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52195 |
Similar Items
-
Freedom and responsibility : motherhood, community and madness in Morrison and Plath.
by: Pang, Yu Ming.
Published: (2010) -
A (Head) Case for a Mad Humanities: Sula's Shadrack and Black Madness
by: Hayley C. Stefan
Published: (2018-12-01) -
Sula /
by: Morrison, Toni, author 532279
Published: (1973) -
Postmodern identity and philosophy in Toni Morrison's Sula.
by: Teo, Rachel Zhen Li.
Published: (2010) -
Reconstructing the fragmented slave mother – the mind, body and spirit in beloved.
by: Fwah, Benjamin Zhengwei.
Published: (2013)