
Why do you think that Marmon Silko mixes poetry and prose in Ceremony? What effect does this choice have on the reader/ on the reader’s conception of Native American identity?


Like Chino, the main character in Bodega Dreams, Ernesto Quinonez was born in Spanish Harlem and spent his early years responding to the vicissitudes of life in the barrio. Quinonez' novel revises and subverts Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and asks us to think seriously about how ethnic identity and poverty affect "The American Dream." How does Quinonez rewrite Fitzgerald's story? How are all the characters in this novel working to remake themselves? What vision of Puerto Rican identity in America does Quinonez present to his readers?
Next week, we'll begin talking about Toni Morrison's seminal 1988 novel, Beloved. Beloved is a book rich with Cincinnati history. It fictionalizes the life of runaway slave Margaret Garner into a magisterial narrative about love, human rights, and our ability to truly "own" the lives we lead. Some of you might be familiar with the story of Garner. She was a slave on a plantation in Kentucky during the 1850s and escaped from her masters with her young children by night from Covington across the Ohio River into the Union enclave of Cincinnati. When slave-catchers reached the home where she and her children were hiding, Garner killed one of her children and attempted to kill the others rather than allow them to be returned to a life of slavery. An America already at odds over the issue of slavery was captivated by the story of Garner and her subsequent trial, which posed fundamental questions about liberty, personhood, and the law. When Junot Diaz was asked by Newsweek to name the 5 books of fiction that were most important to him, he placed Beloved at the top of the list, saying that "[y]ou can't understand the Americas without this novel about the haunting that is our past."
Thomas Saterwaite Noble, "The Modern Medea" (1867)--painting based on Margaret Garner