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    <title>'Toni Morrison' - Tagged Articles - Inquiries Journal</title>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2026 11:37:25 -0400</pubDate>
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				<title>Reading Religion in Literature: Toni Morrison, Luisah Teish, and Postsecular Theory</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/1855/reading-religion-in-literature-toni-morrison-luisah-teish-and-postsecular-theory</link>
				<description>By Kayla R. Drummond - The postsecular turn of the late 1990&amp;rsquo;s refers to the emergence of a  critical theory which challenges an important modern assumption: that  secular ideologies are inherently more valid and truthful than religious  ideologies.  Other developments in literary theory in the latter half of the 20th century were aimed at disrupting and challenging normative assumptions,  and postsecularism was no different. By disrupting the hierarchy of the  knowledge/faith binary, postsecular  theory provides a range of fresh opportunities for reading religion in  literature. This essay examines several important...</description>
				<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2021 12:13 EST</pubDate>
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				<title>Literary Repetition and Revision as Healing: Harryette Mullen and Suzan-Lori Parks&#39;s Collective Solution to Historical Trauma</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/1625/literary-repetition-and-revision-as-healing-harryette-mullen-and-suzan-lori-parkss-collective-solution-to-historical-trauma</link>
				<description>By Zeena Y. Fuleihan - Music functions as a source of healing in Toni Morrison&amp;rsquo;s Jazz, both to the bird who is inexplicably sad and for the broken relationship between Violet and Joe, the novel&amp;rsquo;s two main adult characters. The bird cheers up and regains its appetite once it hears music, and Violet and Joe begin to repair their love after a younger character brings a record player into their home. Borrowing from the musical forms of jazz, and more specifically jazz played by black musicians, Morrison structures her book as a series of solos from various characters, moving forward and backward in time to expand...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 11 Apr 2017 09:09 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/1625/literary-repetition-and-revision-as-healing-harryette-mullen-and-suzan-lori-parkss-collective-solution-to-historical-trauma</guid>
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				<title>Naming and Identity in Toni Morrison&#39;s &quot;Beloved&quot; and &quot;Song of Solomon&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/904/naming-and-identity-in-toni-morrisons-beloved-and-song-of-solomon</link>
				<description>By Sean M. Kirby - As an African American author, Toni Morrison is acutely aware of the pain that is intertwined with the history of her history. She articulates the debilitating physical and psychological strain that slavery, prejudices, and discrimination placed upon countless African Americans with incredible detail. One of her most powerful statements, however, comes in just one sentence near the end of Beloved. It is a truth that all African Americans know, one that was born out of slavery, one that still burns people today: the truth that &amp;ldquo;anybody white could take your whole self for anything that came...</description>
				<pubDate>Sun, 22 Jun 2014 10:39 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/904/naming-and-identity-in-toni-morrisons-beloved-and-song-of-solomon</guid>
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				<title>Stamp Paid and the Power of  Self-Actualization in &quot;Beloved&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/46/stamp-paid-and-the-power-of-self-actualization-in-beloved</link>
				<description>By Michael C. Mindemann - Stamp Paid is introduced in a rather glowing manner. He is the reliable ferryman over the Ohio River, who takes Sethe to 124, working off the kind of antiquated methods that resonate with a quaint nobility in the GPS era: the system he works out telling those on the other side of the river when a crossing is coming and whether or not a child will be on board. (108) He is also introduced as an eminently decent and just-minded person when he has his nephew give up his coat for Denver, the newborn. When the boy complains, Stamp tells the boy that he can have it if he can stomach taking it off the...</description>
				<pubDate>Thu, 12 Nov 2009 05:23 EST</pubDate>
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