![]() ![]() ![]() Bloom’s rigid orthodoxy about what is necessary for educational enlightenment was transformed by Morrison, along with other non-white, non-male, non-binary intellectuals, into a more diverse journey of learning - and appreciation. This focus helped transform the objective nature of the canon. Instead, she favored race, gender, and culture studies. Morrison minimized the need for a canon because its rigidity excludes diversity. Bloom saw adherence to the Western canon “as a process of intense personal engagement with great work” whose goal was to “enlarge a solitary existence.” His list of great works in the Western canon focused on only 26 authors and four major periods covering several millennia. ![]() While popular critical consensus and more glowing appreciations were justifiably aimed at Morrison, those of us who followed the early ’90s clash of these two literary titans over the subject of the canon’s relevancy probably saw perfect closure in the fact that they were now gone from the stage. Harold Bloom’s October 2019 death came two months after the death of Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Toni Morrison. ![]()
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