In Love and Narrative Form in Toni Morrison’s Later
Novels, Jean Wyatt explores the interaction among ideas of
love, narrative innovation, and reader response in Toni Morrison’s
seven later novels. Love comes in a new and surprising shape in
each of the later novels; for example, Love presents it as
the deep friendship between little girls; in Home it acts as
a disruptive force producing deep changes in subjectivity; and in
Jazz it becomes something one innovates and recreates each
moment—like jazz itself. Each novel’s unconventional idea of love
requires a new experimental narrative form.
Wyatt analyzes the stylistic and structural innovations of each
novel, showing how disturbances in narrative chronology, surprise
endings, and gaps mirror the dislocated temporality and distorted
emotional responses of the novels’ troubled characters and demand
that the reader situate the present-day problems of the characters
in relation to a traumatic African American past. The narrative
surprises and gaps require the reader to become an active
participant in making meaning. And the texts’ complex narrative
strategies draw out the reader’s convictions about love, about
gender, about race—and then prompt the reader to reexamine them, so
that reading becomes an active ethical dialogue between text and
reader. Wyatt uses psychoanalytic concepts to analyze Morrison’s
narrative structures and how they work on readers. Love and
Narrative Form devotes a chapter to each of Morrison’s later
novels: Beloved, Jazz, Paradise, Love,
A Mercy, Home, and God Help the Child.