New Books Network

Namwali Serpell, "On Morrison" (Hogarth, 2026)

Apr 8, 2026
Namwali Serpell, award-winning novelist and Harvard English professor, brings fresh readings of Toni Morrison. She discusses Morrison’s deliberate difficulty and modernist influences. Conversations cover The Bluest Eye’s avant-garde form, diasporic storytelling, humor and irony, misreading as a creative practice, and how to teach and write accessible literary criticism.
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INSIGHT

Difficulty As Morrison's Aesthetic Strategy

  • Toni Morrison's literary difficulty is intentional and central to her aesthetics rather than a barrier or flaw.
  • Namwali Serpell frames difficulty as an ethical and aesthetic strategy that invites readers to co-create meaning across Morrison's career.
INSIGHT

Ambiguity Rooted In Modernist And Diasporic Forms

  • Morrison valued ambiguity from early on, influenced by modernists like Faulkner and Woolf and by African diasporic storytelling.
  • Serpell links The Bluest Eye's fragmented form and Morrison's Cornell studies to a genealogy mixing modernism and village literature.
ANECDOTE

Morrison Guided Students To Hear Jazz's Opening

  • Derek Adams recounts taking students to a Toni Morrison event where Morrison guided them to hear Jazz's opening as an oral clicking sound rather than a direct link to Sethe.
  • Morrison used questioning to lead students to reinterpret the S-T as a sound, not an explicit character cue.
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