“Yeah, suicide is a white thing”: Problematizing the Reclamation of the Ghosts of Suicide in David Bradley’s The Chaneysville Incident and Toni Morrison’s BelovedTools Wilde, E (2011) “Yeah, suicide is a white thing”: Problematizing the Reclamation of the Ghosts of Suicide in David Bradley’s The Chaneysville Incident and Toni Morrison’s Beloved. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
AbstractBoth The Chaneysville Incident and Beloved investigate the slippery subject of suicide, as they expose and explore what happened to formerly enslaved men and women who chose death rather than a return to slavery. Both Morrison and Bradley choose to use ghosts to allow those who have committed suicide to speak of their experiences, thus negating the imposition of social, political or religious opinions on the suicide act from the wider living community.
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