The Theme Of Racism In Toni Morrison's Playing In The Dark

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Toni Morrison’s Playing in the Dark addresses the recurring themes and faults of racial portrayal in American literature. A substantial amount of this analysis has to do with the concept of the racial imaginary. Morrison also dives into the idea of the racial canon, or what we have accepted from society's creations and recreations of race. In American literature, Toni Morrison breaks apart the underpinnings of allegories around race as well as draws parallels between the way race is written and the way in which race plays a part in our everyday lives. This novel crafts complex arguments and essential conversations around race, its depiction in America, and its ties to American identity. Racial imaginary is a term to describe the intangible …show more content…

“It is further complicated by the fact that the habit of ignoring race is understood To be a graceful, even liberal gesture,” (Morrison, 10). We still see practices resembling these everyday. Claims of color blindness, while attempting a notion of equality, refuse to see the actual differences in how races are treated in our country, whether materically or through representation. Whiteness being optionally racialized in society is another byproduct of this racial imaginary. The ‘White Gaze’ in which a white author uses a black character to further a white narrative is another theme seen throughout media. This is seldom called out because, as alluded to by Bell Hooks, that racist literature (and general behavior) in normalized in our society. Even an overall tone of neutrality in a work can be damaging, as it reproduces a societal ‘norm’ of racism existing, but never to be …show more content…

York's work focuses mainly on investigating racial hate crimes and other acts of racial violence that have gone generally unnoticed. Both Morrison and York cite this “white mist” as allowing racial violence to exist in America. It is precisely white silence and discomforted outlooks on conversations around race that allow racism to keep thriving. Literary coding of darkness and lightness is another topic that Morrison and tackles in her essay. The ways in which we tie darkness to images pain, suffering, and the unknown and whiteness to purity, light, and safety recreates racial notions in society. The way we depict people in media create certain mind sets that are then reproduced in society and thus have real life, concrete consequences. Morrison speaks of “writing yourself into existence” and the importance of people writing of their own experiences to avoid wrongly forged portrayals leaking into the societal pool of discourse. These analyses come from both the mind of a writer and a reader, the balance of which is another struggle for

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