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Recitatif | Black Writing, White Reading: Race and the Politics of Feminist Interpretation

In the following excerpt, Abel discusses how the
question of race in ‘‘Recitatif’’ prompts readers to
examine the story’s social clues more closely.

Twyla opens the narrative of Toni Morrison’s provocative story ‘‘Recitatif’’ (1982) by recalling her placement as an eight-year-old child in St. Bonaventure, a shelter for neglected children, and her reaction to Roberta Fisk, the roommate she is assigned: ‘‘The minute I walked in . . . I got sick to my stomach. It was one thing to be taken out of your own bed early in the morning—it was something else to be stuck in a strange place with a girl from a whole other race. And Mary, that’s my mother, she was right. Every now and then she would stop dancing long enough to...

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