{"title":"教人仁慈","authors":"Riché Richardson","doi":"10.1353/eal.2024.a918909","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Teaching <em>A Mercy</em> <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Riché Richardson (bio) </li> </ul> <p>Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison was truly royalty to me, and over the years, in my roles as a teacher, scholar and artist, I have treasured every opportunity to reflect on her. In 2005, I first introduced a seminar on her body of novels titled Toni Morrison's Novels on my former campus, the University of California, Davis. In recent times, I have reflected on the opportunities that I've had in my career to teach her work in a range of contexts. For example, in 2019, in the wake of her passing, I discussed my pedagogical process and experience in an op-ed in the <em>Cornell Daily Sun</em>, and as part of a teach-in honoring the fiftieth anniversary of <em>The Bluest Eye</em>, I discussed the novel in a teach-in at Cornell, her alma mater as a 1955 MA in English.<sup>1</sup> Similarly, in April 2022 I served as the invited speaker for the cohort of graduate instructors in Literature Humanities at Columbia University and modeled approaches and ideas for teaching <em>Song of Solomon</em> as they prepared to teach it to undergraduate students in their courses on campus as the selected literary work for the year within its core curriculum.<sup>2</sup></p> <p>I'm thankful to be part of this discussion of teaching strategies for <em>A Mercy</em>. Along with students from my Toni Morrison seminar at the Bread-loaf School of English, I first heard Morrison read from the novel, on the path to its publication, in 2008 at the Toni Morrison Society's Biennial Conference at the College of Charleston. I heard her read from the novel again at Cornell the next year. My method for teaching with Morrison has sometimes related her writings on the past to issues in the present as a way to reflect on her critical epistemology on race and nation, which points to the value in studying early American history.</p> <p>In my African American Short Story course, a writing seminar for first-year students at Cornell that I've taught regularly since 2010, \"The Lynching of Jube Benson\" by Paul Laurence Dunbar, the acclaimed Black poet who famously lamented the limitations of writing \"a jingle in a broken tongue,\" has been among works we've read. The story focuses on Dr. Melville's <strong>[End Page 113]</strong> regretful memory of participating in the lynching of the Black man invoked in the title, who readers discover later in the story is innocent of attacking and killing a young white woman. A key expository passage reflects on the doctor's view of Blackness, which had fueled his suspicions and fateful choices:</p> <blockquote> <p>I saw his black face glooming there in the half light, and I could only think of him as a monster. It's tradition. At first I was told that the black man would catch me, and when I got over that, they taught me that the devil was black, and when I had recovered from the sickness of that belief, here were Jube and his fellows with faces of menacing blackness. There was only one conclusion: This black man stood for all the powers of evil, the result of whose machinations had been gathering in my mind from childhood up. But this has nothing to do with what happened.</p> (Dunbar 6–7) </blockquote> <p>The irony was that it had everything to do with it.</p> <p>In 2014, after the horrific death of Michael Brown and the subsequent protests that erupted in Ferguson, Missouri, I noticed that a substantial number of students in this course selected this story to write on for an assignment as one of the five papers that they were required to produce in the course. They would discuss this imagery related to Blackness from Dunbar's story, given the racial imagery that suffused the grand jury testimony of officer Darren Wilson, Brown's assailant, including the fears that it emphasizes related to the Black masculine body: \"I tried to hold his right arm and use my left hand to get out to have some type of control and not be trapped in my car anymore. And when I grabbed him, the only way I can describe it is...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44043,"journal":{"name":"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Teaching A Mercy\",\"authors\":\"Riché Richardson\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/eal.2024.a918909\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Teaching <em>A Mercy</em> <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Riché Richardson (bio) </li> </ul> <p>Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison was truly royalty to me, and over the years, in my roles as a teacher, scholar and artist, I have treasured every opportunity to reflect on her. In 2005, I first introduced a seminar on her body of novels titled Toni Morrison's Novels on my former campus, the University of California, Davis. In recent times, I have reflected on the opportunities that I've had in my career to teach her work in a range of contexts. For example, in 2019, in the wake of her passing, I discussed my pedagogical process and experience in an op-ed in the <em>Cornell Daily Sun</em>, and as part of a teach-in honoring the fiftieth anniversary of <em>The Bluest Eye</em>, I discussed the novel in a teach-in at Cornell, her alma mater as a 1955 MA in English.<sup>1</sup> Similarly, in April 2022 I served as the invited speaker for the cohort of graduate instructors in Literature Humanities at Columbia University and modeled approaches and ideas for teaching <em>Song of Solomon</em> as they prepared to teach it to undergraduate students in their courses on campus as the selected literary work for the year within its core curriculum.<sup>2</sup></p> <p>I'm thankful to be part of this discussion of teaching strategies for <em>A Mercy</em>. Along with students from my Toni Morrison seminar at the Bread-loaf School of English, I first heard Morrison read from the novel, on the path to its publication, in 2008 at the Toni Morrison Society's Biennial Conference at the College of Charleston. I heard her read from the novel again at Cornell the next year. My method for teaching with Morrison has sometimes related her writings on the past to issues in the present as a way to reflect on her critical epistemology on race and nation, which points to the value in studying early American history.</p> <p>In my African American Short Story course, a writing seminar for first-year students at Cornell that I've taught regularly since 2010, \\\"The Lynching of Jube Benson\\\" by Paul Laurence Dunbar, the acclaimed Black poet who famously lamented the limitations of writing \\\"a jingle in a broken tongue,\\\" has been among works we've read. The story focuses on Dr. Melville's <strong>[End Page 113]</strong> regretful memory of participating in the lynching of the Black man invoked in the title, who readers discover later in the story is innocent of attacking and killing a young white woman. A key expository passage reflects on the doctor's view of Blackness, which had fueled his suspicions and fateful choices:</p> <blockquote> <p>I saw his black face glooming there in the half light, and I could only think of him as a monster. It's tradition. At first I was told that the black man would catch me, and when I got over that, they taught me that the devil was black, and when I had recovered from the sickness of that belief, here were Jube and his fellows with faces of menacing blackness. There was only one conclusion: This black man stood for all the powers of evil, the result of whose machinations had been gathering in my mind from childhood up. But this has nothing to do with what happened.</p> (Dunbar 6–7) </blockquote> <p>The irony was that it had everything to do with it.</p> <p>In 2014, after the horrific death of Michael Brown and the subsequent protests that erupted in Ferguson, Missouri, I noticed that a substantial number of students in this course selected this story to write on for an assignment as one of the five papers that they were required to produce in the course. They would discuss this imagery related to Blackness from Dunbar's story, given the racial imagery that suffused the grand jury testimony of officer Darren Wilson, Brown's assailant, including the fears that it emphasizes related to the Black masculine body: \\\"I tried to hold his right arm and use my left hand to get out to have some type of control and not be trapped in my car anymore. And when I grabbed him, the only way I can describe it is...</p> </p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":44043,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.3000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-02-12\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1353/eal.2024.a918909\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"文学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"LITERATURE, AMERICAN\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/eal.2024.a918909","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE, AMERICAN","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 诺贝尔文学奖得主托尼-莫里森对我来说是真正的皇室成员,多年来,作为一名教师、学者和艺术家,我非常珍惜每一次反思她的机会。2005 年,我第一次在我以前的校园--加州大学戴维斯分校举办了一个关于她的小说的研讨会,题为 "托妮-莫里森的小说"。最近,我对自己职业生涯中在各种场合教授她的作品的机会进行了反思。例如,2019 年,在她去世之后,我在《康奈尔太阳日报》上发表了一篇专栏文章,讨论了我的教学过程和经验;作为纪念《最蓝的眼睛》发表五十周年教学活动的一部分,我在康奈尔大学的一次教学活动中讨论了这部小说,她是我的母校,我是她 1955 年的英语硕士。同样,2022 年 4 月,我应邀为哥伦比亚大学文学人文学科的研究生导师们作了演讲,并示范了教授《所罗门之歌》的方法和思路,因为他们准备在校内课程中将《所罗门之歌》作为本年度核心课程的文学作品选题,教授给本科生2。2008 年,在查尔斯顿学院举行的托尼-莫里森协会两年一度的会议上,我与面包面包英语学院托尼-莫里森研讨班的学生们一起,第一次聆听了莫里森在小说出版前的朗读。第二年,我在康奈尔大学再次聆听了她朗读小说。我在莫里森的教学方法中,有时会将她关于过去的著作与当下的问题联系起来,以此来反思她关于种族和民族的批判认识论,这种认识论指出了研究美国早期历史的价值。自2010年起,我定期在康奈尔大学为一年级学生开设写作讲座,在我的 "美国黑人短篇小说"(African American Short Story)课程中,保罗-劳伦斯-邓巴(Paul Laurence Dunbar)的《对朱比-本森的私刑》(The Lynching of Jube Benson)一直是我们阅读的作品之一。故事主要讲述了梅尔维尔医生 [第113页完] 对参与对标题中提到的黑人施以私刑的悔恨记忆。一个关键的说明性段落反映了医生对黑人的看法,这种看法助长了他的怀疑和决定命运的选择: 我看到他的黑脸在半明半暗的光线下黯然失色,我只能把他当成一个怪物。这是传统。起初,我被告知黑人会抓住我,当我克服了这一点后,他们又教我魔鬼是黑色的,当我从这种信念的病态中恢复过来时,朱伯和他的伙伴们就在这里了,他们的脸上都是黑色,气势汹汹。结论只有一个这个黑人代表了所有邪恶的力量,他们的阴谋诡计从小就在我的脑海中聚集。但这与发生的事情毫无关系。(邓巴 6-7)讽刺的是,这一切都与之有关。2014 年,在迈克尔-布朗(Michael Brown)骇人听闻的死亡事件以及随后在密苏里州弗格森爆发的抗议活动之后,我注意到,在这门课程中,有相当多的学生选择了这个故事作为作业,作为他们在这门课程中必须完成的五篇论文之一。鉴于大陪审团对袭击布朗的警官达伦-威尔逊(Darren Wilson)的证词中充斥着种族意象,他们会讨论邓巴故事中与黑人有关的意象,包括故事中强调的与黑人男性身体有关的恐惧:"我试图抓住他的右臂,用我的左手离开,以获得某种控制,不再被困在车里。当我抓住他时,我能描述的唯一方式就是......
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Teaching A Mercy
Riché Richardson (bio)
Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison was truly royalty to me, and over the years, in my roles as a teacher, scholar and artist, I have treasured every opportunity to reflect on her. In 2005, I first introduced a seminar on her body of novels titled Toni Morrison's Novels on my former campus, the University of California, Davis. In recent times, I have reflected on the opportunities that I've had in my career to teach her work in a range of contexts. For example, in 2019, in the wake of her passing, I discussed my pedagogical process and experience in an op-ed in the Cornell Daily Sun, and as part of a teach-in honoring the fiftieth anniversary of The Bluest Eye, I discussed the novel in a teach-in at Cornell, her alma mater as a 1955 MA in English.1 Similarly, in April 2022 I served as the invited speaker for the cohort of graduate instructors in Literature Humanities at Columbia University and modeled approaches and ideas for teaching Song of Solomon as they prepared to teach it to undergraduate students in their courses on campus as the selected literary work for the year within its core curriculum.2
I'm thankful to be part of this discussion of teaching strategies for A Mercy. Along with students from my Toni Morrison seminar at the Bread-loaf School of English, I first heard Morrison read from the novel, on the path to its publication, in 2008 at the Toni Morrison Society's Biennial Conference at the College of Charleston. I heard her read from the novel again at Cornell the next year. My method for teaching with Morrison has sometimes related her writings on the past to issues in the present as a way to reflect on her critical epistemology on race and nation, which points to the value in studying early American history.
In my African American Short Story course, a writing seminar for first-year students at Cornell that I've taught regularly since 2010, "The Lynching of Jube Benson" by Paul Laurence Dunbar, the acclaimed Black poet who famously lamented the limitations of writing "a jingle in a broken tongue," has been among works we've read. The story focuses on Dr. Melville's [End Page 113] regretful memory of participating in the lynching of the Black man invoked in the title, who readers discover later in the story is innocent of attacking and killing a young white woman. A key expository passage reflects on the doctor's view of Blackness, which had fueled his suspicions and fateful choices:
I saw his black face glooming there in the half light, and I could only think of him as a monster. It's tradition. At first I was told that the black man would catch me, and when I got over that, they taught me that the devil was black, and when I had recovered from the sickness of that belief, here were Jube and his fellows with faces of menacing blackness. There was only one conclusion: This black man stood for all the powers of evil, the result of whose machinations had been gathering in my mind from childhood up. But this has nothing to do with what happened.
(Dunbar 6–7)
The irony was that it had everything to do with it.
In 2014, after the horrific death of Michael Brown and the subsequent protests that erupted in Ferguson, Missouri, I noticed that a substantial number of students in this course selected this story to write on for an assignment as one of the five papers that they were required to produce in the course. They would discuss this imagery related to Blackness from Dunbar's story, given the racial imagery that suffused the grand jury testimony of officer Darren Wilson, Brown's assailant, including the fears that it emphasizes related to the Black masculine body: "I tried to hold his right arm and use my left hand to get out to have some type of control and not be trapped in my car anymore. And when I grabbed him, the only way I can describe it is...