Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The Truth of Toni Morrison

12 snips
Feb 19, 2026
A lively dive into Toni Morrison's novels and how they center complicated Black lives. They revisit The Bluest Eye, Beloved, and Jazz to explore form, memory, and musical storytelling. The conversation questions celebrity and monuments while celebrating Morrison's insistence on flawed, deeply human characters.
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INSIGHT

Persona Can Eclipse The Page

  • Toni Morrison's public persona risks eclipsing the complexity of her novels.
  • Namwali Serpell's On Morrison invites readers back to the texts themselves rather than the clips.
ANECDOTE

Formative High-School Reading

  • Alexandra Schwartz first read The Bluest Eye in high school with a teacher who deeply shaped her love of texts.
  • She credits that teacher with telling her she could be a writer and teaching close, line-by-line reading.
ANECDOTE

Beloved As A Class Climax

  • Vinson Cunningham first encountered Beloved in 10th grade as the capstone of his American literature course.
  • He remembers the collective experience of students reacting intensely to the book.
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