preview

Summary Of Toni Morrison's Recitatif

Good Essays

Toni Morrison’s short story “Recitatif,” centralizes questions about racial identity, community, and prejudice. She explicitly states that out of the pair of friends, Twyla and Roberta, one is white and the other is black. Unlike other works with similar themes, Morrison intentionally keeps the main characters racially ambiguous. Maggie’s entire characterization is ambiguous. Her racial ambiguity is particularly significant to Twyla and Roberta. Morrison uses the racial ambiguity of her characters to demonstrate that racial prejudice is a learned behavior that incites the superficial racial classification of people and that the value of a person remains beyond that classification.
Morrison offers contradictory clues about Twyla and Roberta’s race throughout the short story. These clues serve the purpose of confusing the reader and, in doing so, illuminating the reader’s own prejudices and assumptions about race. When Twyla first meets Roberta, she recalls her mother, Mary’s, advice about people of Roberta’s race, “…they never washed their hair and they smelled funny” (2820). Hair has a racially charged history in the United States, especially surrounding black people’s hair. Negative opinions on afro-textured hair have been a part of racism against black people since the introduction of slavery. Despite the seemingly clear connection between negativity and afro-textured hair hinting that Roberta is black, Mary’s comment remains ambiguous since the same prejudice can be

Get Access