An Overview of Toni Morrison’s - Recitatif
Uploaded by KoolKrooz on Jan 14, 2012
Toni Morrison’s Recitatif is about Roberta and Twyla, two girls that live and grow up in an orphanage, due ot the fact that their mother’s could not yield proper care and attention for them.
The underlying theme in Recitatif deals with racism. An interesting twist is the mystery of the girls’ race. Leaving clues, but never stating whether Twyla or Roberta was black or white, Morrison makes it clear that the girls come from different ethnic backgrounds. At one point in the essay Twyla comments, “that we looked like salt and pepper.” Due to the fact that the story is told in the first person, it seems natural for the reader to associate Twyla with himself/herself. “Recitatif” proves to be a noteworthy experiment, “toying” with the reader’s emotions and effectively noting stereotypical races and their characteristics. Morrison never states the race of the girls for a purpose: to make the reader form his/her own opinion. The story begins with Twyla’s mother dropping her off at the orphanage. There she met Roberta, who became her best friend, bonding because they were not real orphans with “beautiful dead parents in the sky.” Instead of being “real” orphans, they were just abandoned kids whose mother’s did not want them. Although the girls had few friends, their lives did not lack adventure. For example, they enjoyed spying on the big girls who liked to smoke and dance, and sadly got a laugh out of yelling mean things at Maggie, the woman who couldn’t defend herself because she was mute. One of the last times the girls saw each other in the orphanage was the day of the picnic. Shortly after the picnic Roberta’s mother came to take her home, marking the first small fracture in their friendship. The next time they saw each other was years later in the restaurant that Twyla worked. Roberta acts coldly towards Roberta partly because she was high off of drugs, on her way to see a Jimi Hendrix concert. Twyla was deeply offended that her former best friend would treat her so badly. Twelve years later they meet again at a grocery store. Roberta married a rich man and was now called Mrs. Benson; she was dressed in diamonds and talked much nicer to Twyla. By this time, Twyla has one child and Roberta has four. Strangely, Roberta acts extremely friendly, like she has met her long lost...