Thursday, August 13, 2020
Morrison Marginalia TAR BABY
Morrison Marginalia TAR BABY The Riot Reading Day for Toni Morrison is less than two weeks away, and I have miles (and 5 books) to go before I sleep. When I first read Toni Morrison in a seminar in college, she had 8 novels out (Love had just been released), and my professor concluded that we only had time to read 7 of them in the 14-week semester. Two weeks per book is about right, and I wish I had remembered that when I set out to try to read all NINE of her now-extant novels in just 12 weeks. Insanity, I tell you. Tar Baby was the book that got the boot from that class, so Iâve only ever read it on my own, and only once before. While there were moments in which I wished for academic notes during my reading, I also found it deeply satisfying to discover that I could encounter Morrison completely on my own and come out relatively unscathed. My notes from this reading filled seven college-ruled notebook pages. Hereâs the condensed version.* Read previous installments of Morrison Marginalia here. ____________________ The epigraph, from 1 Corinthians 1:11, is super-interesting. âFor it hath been declared unto me of you, my brethren, by them which are of the house of Chloe, that there are contentions among you.â This book is definitely about a house filled with contentions, but what really fascinates me here is that Morrisonâs real name is Chloe Wofford, and I know Morrison well enough to know that this is no coincidence. What is she telling us about herself here? The foreword is equally compelling. In the first paragraph, Morrison discusses storytelling and says, âAll narrative begins for me as listening.â Later, she says that the novel âmerged the primal and the contemporary, lore and reality.â Donât worry, friends, Iâve already googled the original tar baby folk tale half a dozen times. We are ready to rock. 11: Valerian Street, what a name! And Margaret being known as The Principal Beauty of Maine? Fantastic. It is a truth universally acknowledged that odd names can distract readers and pull them out of the moment. Maybe Iâm just attenuated to the fact that Morrison does this, but damn, she makes it work. 15: First mention of exile, a major theme of Tar Baby. 19: Valerian contemplates his reasons for retreating to LâArbe de la Croix and notes that âeverybody is conspiring to ruin it for me.â He says he wants peace and quiet, but his delight and amusement at discovering Son would indicate otherwise. 26: âItâs just that Iâm undergoing this very big change in my life called dyingâ So melodramatic, Valerian, but so wonderful. 36: Ondine and Sydney talk about Michael and Margaretâs relationship, and Ondine tells Sydney, âHeâs not the one whoâs not natural. She is.â Hello, foreshadowing. 39: Reference to âone of them Marysâ calls to mind the Deweys of Sula. Morrison presents othering and the notion that âtheyâre all the sameâ without putting too fine a point on it.yet. 48: âSometimes I want to get out of my skin and be only the person insidenot Americannot blackjust me.â Issues of color and racial identity loom large in this book, so itâs worth noting that Jadine is the first light-skinned black woman (Gideon calls her âyallaâ later on) to have truly extended screentime in a Morrison novel, and Tar Baby is the only of her oeuvre to feature white main characters. 67: Regarding Valerian and Margaretâs âMay and December marriage,â Jadine thinks, âHe is waning, shutting up, closing in. Sheâs blazing with the fire of a soon to be setting sun.â Damn if I donât want my middle age to blaze with the same fire. 94: âThings went back to their natural state so quickly in that place.â Morrison plays with the notion that black = wild here to explore the fear that Sonâs presence will reintroduce Jade to her wildness. This recalls Sula and her funkiness (and Helene Wrightâs fear that hanging out with Sula would turn Nel wild), and now I really want to read a paper that puts Tar Baby alongside Sula. 99: Sydney refers to Son as âthat nigger.â Itâs not the first time Morrison has shown us one black person calling another one ânigger,â and I know she does it to demonstrate intra-racial caste and class systems, but I am always caught a little off-guard by it. And honestly, I am deeply uncomfortable quoting it here. But the alternative, to reduce it to ân-word,â would be a crime against Morrison and her work. 119: The image of Son standing over Jadineâs bed and whispering dreams to her is creepy but also sort of enchanting. And my Cambridge Companion to Toni Morrison tells me itâs an allusion to Paradise Lost. Well played, ToMo. I expect nothing less than subtle references to difficult works of classic literature. 129: Now, in a conversation with Margaret, Jadine calls son a âniggerâ but bristles when Margaret says he looked like a âgorillaâ when she found him hiding in the closet. This gives me pause, and I think Morrison wants that. 134-137: I simply adore the story of how Son came to the island, and Morrisonâs use of repetition to hammer home âHe had not followed the womenâ is beautiful. 155: Gideon (Yardman) and Son discuss Jadine and her status as a âyalla.â Gideon says, âItâs hard for them not to be white peopleYallas donât come to being black natural-like. They have to choose it and most donât choose it.â I love that Morrison questions the notion that racial identity is immutable, and I want more of this conversation about what it means to embrace or reject blackness. 185: Jadine and Son return from the picnic during which Jadine gets stuck in the swamp, and Margaret looks at the muck on Jadineâs clothing, noting, âIt looks like pitchâ (emphasis mine). You know, just in case you werenât sure that Jade is the tar baby in this scenario. 186: Reference to âDorcus, the one black girl she ever looked in the fact.â Thereâs a Dorcas in Jazz. A minor change in spelling, but still. Is Morrison going to connect these characters, or is she just a fan of repeating character names? Weâve seen Suggs in multiple novels already, and Baby Suggs is HUGE in Beloved. 206: Valerian has come off as relatively friendly to the black characters in the book so far, but he fires Gideon and Thérèse for taking apples and responds to Syndney and Ondineâs protests with, âI am being questioned by these people, as if, as if I could be called into question!â White privilege and entitlement rear their ugly heads. 219: Son thinks of his and Jadineâs leave-taking as an âescape from the plantation.â There. It. Is. 222: In New York, Son and Jade would âdrink margaritas at Suggs.â See what I mean about repetition of names? 230: Jadine and Son become so close that their âlanguage diminished to code.â Ahhh, ainât love grand? 236: The revelation that Margaret abused Michael is a big one, and I so appreciate that itâs not one-dimensional and that Margaret is straight-up vilified (right, as if Toni Morrison does anything one-dimensionally). She notes that Margaret was âoutraged by that infant needfulness,â and thatâs another call back to Sula and the burden of motherhood. 262: Iâm just going to say it. I do not get the âcovenâ of women who appear to Jadine and bare their breasts. Please explain it to me. 265: Thérèseâs last name is Foucault. Donât tell me that doesnât mean something. 270: âPeople donât mix races; they abandon them or pick them.â Iâve read a lot of studies about how peopleâs sexual identities evolves and changes over the course of a lifetime, and I would love to read something similar about racial identity. (If you know of a good resource, please leave a link in the comments.) 305: Thérèse tells Son that Jadine has âforgotten her ancient properties.â Is this an indictment of Jadineâs assimilation? Also, an essay in the Cambridge Companion quotes the line as âshe has lost her true and ancient properties.â Is this a misquote, or did Morrison actually change the line at some point? [I asked Twitter, and a reader who owns the original said it was just ancient properties. So now Im really curious about where the true got added in along the way.] *page numbers refer to 2004 Vintage edition Sign up to Unusual Suspects to receive news and recommendations for mystery/thriller readers. Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.