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‘A well deserved celebration’: Charting Toni Morrison’s path to creativity

Some school districts are banning Toni Morrison’s books, but Princeton University is celebrating the work of the late author – whose legacy was commemorated this month by the United States Postal Service with a “forever” stamp.

A new exhibit at the school, where Ms. Morrison was a professor, offers a trove of background material on what inspired the Nobel laureate and Pulitzer Prize winner – for “Beloved” – and led to her literary milestones.

Why We Wrote This

Decorated author Toni Morrison’s approach to creativity involved drawing her settings and jotting inspiration on paper scraps. What does her process tell us about her path toward influencing American culture?

“Toni Morrison: Sites of Memory,” at Princeton’s Firestone Library through early June, draws on archival material acquired in 2014, including manuscript drafts, sketches, musings, correspondence, and photographs. 

“Toni Morrison transformed how we, as a culture, talk about history, slavery, and memory,” says the exhibit’s lead curator, Autumn Womack, via email. “A book like Beloved, for example, created an entirely new framework for thinking about how the past is always haunting us.”

“My hope is that visitors will leave with a sense of Morrison’s creative practice,” adds Dr. Womack. 

Ilene Renshaw has traveled from nearby Pennington, New Jersey, to come read the musings of one of her favorite authors. After at least 45 minutes of taking in posted material and watching a video, she is satisfied with making the trip to campus. 

“This is a well-deserved celebration,” she says.

Some school districts are banning her books, but a prominent American university is celebrating the canon of work by the late Toni Morrison – who won literature’s highest awards and whose legacy was commemorated this month by the United States Postal Service with a “forever” stamp.

Most people turn to her books, like Pulitzer Prize winner “Beloved,” to better understand the author and the history she depicts. But a new exhibit at Princeton University, where Ms. Morrison was a professor, offers a trove of background material on what inspired the writer and led to her literary milestones. 

“Toni Morrison transformed how we, as a culture, talk about history, slavery, and memory,” says the exhibit’s lead curator, Autumn Womack, via email. “A book like Beloved, for example, created an entirely new framework for thinking about how the past is always haunting us.”

Why We Wrote This

Decorated author Toni Morrison’s approach to creativity involved drawing her settings and jotting inspiration on paper scraps. What does her process tell us about her path toward influencing American culture?

“Toni Morrison: Sites of Memory,” at Princeton’s Firestone Library through early June, draws on archival material the university acquired in 2014, including manuscript drafts, sketches, musings, correspondence, photographs, and a taped interview.

“My hope is that visitors will leave with a sense of Morrison’s creative practice, not only what she wrote, but how she wrote, how she moved from what she describes as a question to published masterpiece,” adds Dr. Womack, an assistant professor in the department of English and African American studies at Princeton. 

Brandon Johnson/Princeton University Library

Materials on display at the “Toni Morrison: Sites of Memory” exhibition at Princeton’s Firestone Library include papers, photographs, sketches, and a video interview.

As a working mother to two sons, the author often had to snatch bits of time to formulate story ideas during commutes to and from work. She kept paper handy in the car to write her musings. “If you know it really has come, then you have to put it down,” she once told the Paris Review.

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