Spring 2009

FAULKNER AND MORRISON

Listed in: Black Studies, as BLST-56  |  English, as ENGL-95

Faculty

Marisa Parham (Section 03)

Description

(Also Black Studies 56.) William Faulkner and Toni Morrison are generally understood as two of the most important writers of the twentieth century, and indeed, the work of each is integral to American literature. But why are Morrison and Faulkner so often mentioned in the same breath-he, born in the South, white and wealthy, she, the daughter of a working-class black family in the Midwest? Perhaps it is because in a country that works hard to live without a racial past, both Morrison’s and Faulkner’s work bring deep articulation to the often unseen, and more commonly-the unspeakable. This class will explore the breadth of each author’s work, looking for where their texts converge and diverge. As we will learn how to talk and write about the visions, dreams, and nightmares-all represented as daily life-that these authors offer. Spring semester. Professor Parham.