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edsantiago 's review for:
Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination
by Toni Morrison
I shouldn't have read this book. I am not the target audience; chances are, you aren't either. This is a scholarly critical work, the kind with sentences like "establishing hierarchic difference to its surrogate properties as self-reflexive meditations on the loss of of difference". The kind that some academics swoon over, the kind that Alan Sokal so famously riffed; and if it wasn't for the seriousness of her subject matter -- the tragic absence of African voices in American literature -- I would be convinced that she, too, was poking fun at the academics. As it is, I don't know. I'm not smart or educated enough to understand even one sentence in ten, let alone figure out her tone.
If you read and study Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, Twain, and Poe; if you use "allegorical figuration" and "pleonastic reinforcement" in everyday conversation; by all means read this book. Have fun with it. Otherwise, don't bother. Morrison has so much more to offer us mortals.
If you read and study Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, Twain, and Poe; if you use "allegorical figuration" and "pleonastic reinforcement" in everyday conversation; by all means read this book. Have fun with it. Otherwise, don't bother. Morrison has so much more to offer us mortals.