Transition in Toni Morrison’s “consolata” from paradise (1997)

Authors

  • Rosalía Villa Jiménez University of Córdoba

Abstract

In her novel Paradise (1997), Toni Morrison portrays one of her main characters, Consolata or “disconsolate”, through a constant journey in search for her African American identity as a complete woman. This journey engulfs Consolata in an eternal fluctuation between hope and hopelessness, which results from being caught up in the so-called liminal/diaspora space in hybridity (Bhabha, 1994; Brah, 1996).

The present paper deals with location of culture and gender identity in the marginal, unhomely spaces between dominant social formations by analysing chapter 7 “Consolata”. Consolata may be seen as an illustrative example of the black female community struggling to overcome the hurdles of being victimised as hybrid diasporic women in a patriarchal archaic western [black] culture.

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Author Biography

Rosalía Villa Jiménez, University of Córdoba

PhD in Languages and Cultures, Department of English and German Philology, Assistant Professor

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Published

2018-01-12

How to Cite

Villa Jiménez, R. (2018). Transition in Toni Morrison’s “consolata” from paradise (1997). The Grove - Working Papers on English Studies, 24. Retrieved from https://revistaselectronicas.ujaen.es/index.php/grove/article/view/3007