Adulthood, Howard and Cornell years, and editing career: 1949–1975 In 1949, she enrolled at
Howard University in
Washington, D.C., seeking the company of fellow Black intellectuals. Initially a student in the drama program at Howard, she studied theatre with celebrated drama teachers
Anne Cooke Reid and
Owen Dodson. It was while at Howard that she encountered
racially segregated restaurants and buses for the first time. Morrison went on to earn a Master of Arts degree in 1955 from
Cornell University in
Ithaca, New York. Her master's thesis was titled "
Virginia Woolf's and
William Faulkner's treatment of the alienated". She taught English, first at
Texas Southern University in
Houston from 1955 to 1957, and then at Howard University for the next seven years. While teaching at Howard, she met Harold Morrison, a Jamaican architect, whom she married in 1958. Their first son was born in 1961 and she was pregnant with their second son when she and Harold divorced in 1964. After her divorce and the birth of her son Slade in 1965, Morrison began working as an editor for L. W. Singer, a textbook division of publisher
Random House, In that capacity, Morrison played a vital role in bringing
Black literature into the mainstream. One of the first books she worked on was the groundbreaking
Contemporary African Literature (1972), a collection that included work by Nigerian writers
Wole Soyinka,
Chinua Achebe, and South African playwright
Athol Fugard. and novelist
Gayl Jones, whose writing Morrison discovered. She also brought to publication the 1975
autobiography of the outspoken boxing champion
Muhammad Ali,
The Greatest: My Own Story. In addition, she published and promoted the work of
Henry Dumas, a little-known novelist and poet who in 1968 had been shot to death by a transit officer in the
New York City Subway. Among other books that Morrison developed and edited is
The Black Book (1974), an anthology of photographs, illustrations, essays, and documents of Black life in the United States from the time of slavery to the 1920s. The novel did not sell well at first, but the
City University of New York put
The Bluest Eye on its reading list for its new
Black studies department, as did other colleges, which boosted sales. The book also brought Morrison to the attention of the acclaimed editor
Robert Gottlieb at
Knopf, an imprint of the publisher Random House. Gottlieb later edited all but one of Morrison's novels.
Song of Solomon also won the
National Book Critics Circle Award. At its 1979 commencement ceremonies,
Barnard College awarded Morrison its highest honor, the
Barnard Medal of Distinction. Morrison gave her next novel,
Tar Baby (1981), a contemporary setting. In it, a looks-obsessed fashion model, Jadine, falls in love with Son, a penniless drifter who feels at ease with being Black. Morrison left publishing to devote more time to writing, while living in a converted boathouse on the
Hudson River in
Nyack, New York. She taught English at two branches of the
State University of New York (SUNY) and at
Rutgers University's New Brunswick campus. In 1984, she was appointed to an
Albert Schweitzer chair at the
University at Albany, SUNY. Morrison's first play,
Dreaming Emmett, is about the 1955 murder by white men of Black teenager
Emmett Till. The play was commissioned by the New York State Writers Institute at the State University of New York at Albany, where she was teaching at the time. It was produced in 1986 by
Capital Repertory Theatre and directed by
Gilbert Moses. Morrison was also a visiting professor at
Bard College from 1986 to 1988.
Beloved trilogy and the Nobel Prize: 1987–1998 In 1987, Morrison published her most celebrated novel,
Beloved. It was inspired by the true story of an enslaved African-American woman,
Margaret Garner, whose story Morrison had discovered when compiling
The Black Book. Garner had escaped slavery but was pursued by slave hunters. Facing a return to slavery, Garner killed her two-year-old daughter but was captured before she could kill herself. Morrison's novel imagines the dead baby returning as a ghost, Beloved, to haunt her mother and family.
Beloved was a critical success and a bestseller for 25 weeks.
The New York Times book reviewer
Michiko Kakutani wrote that the scene of the mother killing her baby is "so brutal and disturbing that it appears to warp time before and after into a single unwavering line of fate". Canadian writer
Margaret Atwood wrote in a review for
The New York Times, "Ms. Morrison's versatility and technical and emotional range appear to know no bounds. If there were any doubts about her stature as a pre-eminent American novelist, of her own or any other generation,
Beloved will put them to rest." Some critics panned
Beloved. African-American conservative social critic
Stanley Crouch, for instance, complained in his review in
The New Republic that the novel "reads largely like a melodrama lashed to the structural conceits of the miniseries", and that Morrison "perpetually interrupts her narrative with maudlin ideological commercials". Despite overall high acclaim,
Beloved failed to win the prestigious
National Book Award or the
National Book Critics Circle Award. Forty-eight Black critics and writers, among them
Maya Angelou, protested the omission in a statement that
The New York Times published on January 24, 1988. "Despite the international stature of Toni Morrison, she has yet to receive the national recognition that her five major works of fiction entirely deserve", they wrote. Morrison said they are intended to be read together, explaining: "The conceptual connection is the search for the beloved – the part of the self that is you, and loves you, and is always there for you." In 1992, Morrison also published her first book of literary criticism,
Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination (1992), an examination of the African-American presence in White American literature. (In 2016,
Time magazine noted that
Playing in the Dark was among Morrison's most-assigned texts on U.S. college campuses, together with several of her novels and her 1993
Nobel Prize lecture.) Lyn Innes wrote in the
Guardian obituary of Morrison, "Her 1990 series of Massey lectures at Harvard were published as Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination (1992), and explore the construction of a 'non-white Africanist presence and personae' in the works of
Poe,
Hawthorne,
Melville,
Cather and
Hemingway, arguing that 'all of us are bereft when criticism remains too polite or too fearful to notice a disrupting darkness before its eyes'." She was the first Black woman of any nationality to win the prize. In her acceptance speech, Morrison said: "We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives." In her Nobel lecture, Morrison talked about the power of storytelling. To make her point, she told a story. She spoke about a blind, old, Black woman who is approached by a group of young people. They demand of her, "Is there no context for our lives? No song, no literature, no poem full of vitamins, no history connected to experience that you can pass along to help us start strong? ... Think of our lives and tell us your particularized world. Make up a story." Morrison received an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Howard University during its Charter Day celebration in 1995. After the ceremony, she delivered the speech "
The First Solution", excerpts of which were later published as an essay titled "Racism and Fascism". The speech discussed the ongoing threat of fascism to democracy, which she said makes inroads through a series of ten steps. Scholar
Dana A. Williams writes that Morrison lays out the argument that racism "is as much a strategy used to invoke fear and to uphold fabricated hierarchies as fascism". In 1996, the
National Endowment for the Humanities selected Morrison for the
Jefferson Lecture, the U.S. federal government's highest honor for "distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities". Morrison's lecture, entitled "The Future of Time: Literature and Diminished Expectations", began with the aphorism: "Time, it seems, has no future." She cautioned against the misuse of history to diminish expectations of the future. Morrison was also honored with the 1996
National Book Foundation's Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, which is awarded to a writer "who has enriched our literary heritage over a life of service, or a corpus of work". The third novel of her
Beloved Trilogy,
Paradise, about citizens of an all-Black town, came out in 1997. The following year, Morrison was on the cover of
Time magazine, making her only the second female writer of fiction and second Black writer of fiction to appear on what was perhaps the most significant U.S. magazine cover of the era.
Beloved onscreen and "the Oprah effect" Also in 1998, the movie adaptation of
Beloved was released, directed by
Jonathan Demme and co-produced by
Oprah Winfrey, who had spent ten years bringing it to the screen. Winfrey also stars as the main character, Sethe, alongside
Danny Glover as Sethe's lover, Paul D, and
Thandiwe Newton as Beloved. The movie flopped at the box office. A review in
The Economist opined that "most audiences are not eager to endure nearly three hours of a cerebral film with an original storyline featuring supernatural themes, murder, rape, and slavery". Film critic
Janet Maslin, in her
New York Times review "No Peace from a Brutal Legacy", called it a "transfixing, deeply felt adaptation of Toni Morrison's novel. ... Its linchpin is of course Oprah Winfrey, who had the clout and foresight to bring 'Beloved' to the screen and has the dramatic presence to hold it together." Film critic
Roger Ebert suggested that
Beloved was not a genre ghost story but the supernatural was used to explore deeper issues and the non-linear structure of Morrison's story had a purpose. An average of 13 million viewers watched the show's book club segments. As a result, when Winfrey selected Morrison's earliest novel
The Bluest Eye in 2000, it sold another 800,000 paperback copies. Winfrey selected a total of four of Morrison's novels over six years, giving Morrison's works a bigger sales boost than they received from her Nobel Prize win in 1993. The novelist also appeared three times on Winfrey's show. Winfrey said, "For all those who asked the question 'Toni Morrison again?'... I say with certainty there would have been no Oprah's Book Club if this woman had not chosen to share her love of words with the world." Morrison returned to Margaret Garner's life story, the basis of her novel
Beloved, to write the
libretto for a new opera,
Margaret Garner. Completed in 2002, with music by Richard Danielpour, the opera was premièred on May 7, 2005, at the
Detroit Opera House with
Denyce Graves in the title role.
Love, Morrison's first novel since
Paradise, came out in 2003. In 2004, she put together a children's book called
Remember to mark the 50th anniversary of the
Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision in 1954 that declared racially segregated public schools to be unconstitutional. From 1997 to 2003, Morrison was an Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large at
Cornell University. In 2004, Morrison was invited by
Wellesley College to deliver the
commencement address, which has been described as "among the greatest commencement addresses of all time and a courageous counterpoint to the entire genre". In June 2005, the
University of Oxford awarded Morrison an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree. In the spring 2006,
The New York Times Book Review named
Beloved the best work of American fiction published in the previous 25 years, as chosen by a selection of prominent writers, literary critics, and editors. In his essay about the choice, "In Search of the Best", critic
A. O. Scott said: "Any other outcome would have been startling since Morrison's novel has inserted itself into the American canon more completely than any of its potential rivals. With remarkable speed, 'Beloved' has, less than 20 years after its publication, become a staple of the college literary curriculum, which is to say a classic. This triumph is commensurate with its ambition since it was Morrison's intention in writing it precisely to expand the range of classic American literature, to enter, as a living Black woman, the company of dead White males like
Faulkner,
Melville,
Hawthorne and
Twain." In November 2006, Morrison visited the
Louvre museum in Paris as the second in its "Grand Invité" program to guest-curate a month-long series of events across the arts on the theme of "The Foreigner's Home", about which
The New York Times said: "In tapping her own African-American culture, Ms. Morrison is eager to credit 'foreigners' with enriching the countries where they settle." Morrison's novel
A Mercy, released in 2008, is set in the Virginia colonies of 1682.
Diane Johnson, in her review in
Vanity Fair, called
A Mercy "a poetic, visionary, mesmerizing tale that captures, in the cradle of our present problems and strains, the natal curse put on us back then by the Indian tribes, Africans, Dutch, Portuguese, and English competing to get their footing in the New World against a hostile landscape and the essentially tragic nature of human experience."
Princeton years From 1989 until her retirement in 2006, Morrison held the
Robert F. Goheen Chair in the Humanities at
Princeton University.
Final years: 2010–2019 In May 2010, Morrison appeared at
PEN World Voices for a conversation with
Marlene van Niekerk and
Kwame Anthony Appiah about
South African literature and specifically van Niekerk's 2004 novel
Agaat. Morrison wrote books for children with her younger son, Slade Morrison, who was a painter and a musician. Slade died of
pancreatic cancer on December 22, 2010, aged 45, she delivered a speech on the "pursuit of life, liberty, meaningfulness, integrity, and truth". In 2011, Morrison worked with opera director
Peter Sellars and
Malian singer-songwriter
Rokia Traoré on
Desdemona, taking a fresh look at
William Shakespeare's tragedy
Othello. The trio focused on the relationship between
Othello's wife
Desdemona and her African nursemaid, Barbary, who is only briefly referenced in Shakespeare. The play, a mix of words, music and song, premiered in
Vienna in 2011. Morrison had stopped working on her latest novel when her son died in 2010, later explaining, "I stopped writing until I began to think, He would be really put out if he thought that he had caused me to stop. 'Please, Mom, I'm dead, could you keep going ...? She completed
Home and dedicated it to her son Slade. Published in 2012, it is the story of a
Korean War veteran in the segregated United States of the 1950s who tries to save his sister from brutal medical experiments at the hands of a white doctor. an international literary society founded in 1993, dedicated to scholarly research of Morrison's work. Morrison's eleventh novel,
God Help the Child, was published in 2015. It follows Bride, an executive in the fashion and beauty industry whose mother tormented her as a child for being dark-skinned, a trauma that has continued to dog Bride. Morrison was a member of the editorial advisory board of
The Nation, a magazine started in 1865 by Northern abolitionists. ==Personal life==