Toni Morrison was born on
February 18th, 1931, in Lorain, Ohio. Lorain is a steel town on Lake
Erie near Cleveland. Morrison was named Chloe Anthony Wofford by her parents,
George Wofford and Ramah Willis Wofford. George moved his family from Kentucky,
in the south, to Ohio because of the state's racism and poverty. Growing up,
Morrison digested stories and tales of black life during the Reconstruction era
in the south. She realized that whatever she did in her life would be easy, in
comparison.
Morrison was brought up in a
nurturing, religious environment surrounded by black women who served as a
safety net against the racism she experienced. The tradition of the underground
railroad and heroic stories of rescues of black slaves from the south fed her
young mind. She excelled in high school even though she grew up in an
educational system that ignored the contributions of nonwhites. She graduated
at the top of her class.
She attended Howard
University in Washington, D.C. where she changed her first name from Chloe to
Toni. She graduated and did her graduate work in American literature at Cornell
University. In 1957, Morrison taught Humanities and English at Texas Southern
University, then worked at Howard University, as an English Instructor, for
eight years.
In 1966, she joined a
literary symposium and began writing. She contributed stories she had written
in high school. From 1965 to 1983, Morrison worked as a textbook editor at
Random House. In 1967 she was transferred to New York as senior editor where
she edited many books by famous blacks such as Mohammed Ali, Andrew Young and
Angela Davis.
She was divorced and, in
addition to her job, she raised two small children.
While she was working as an
editor at Random House, she was also sending her own book out to publishing
houses. In 1970, The Bluest Eye was published.
The following year she
returned to teaching, serving as the chair of Albert Schweitzer Professor of
Humanities of the State University of New York (Purchase) while living in a
boathouse in Nyack and working on her book, Sula.
In 1974, she wrote The
Black Book, a memory album of three centuries of black history. Bill Crosby
wrote the introduction. During the next decade Morrison served as a visiting
lecturer at Yale University where she finished her book, The Song of Solomon
(1977). The book was awarded the 1978 Book Critics Circle Award for fiction and
in 1996 it went to the top of the bestsellers list nationwide when it was recommended
on Oprah Winfrey's show.
Later, Morrison published Tar
Baby, followed by Beloved in 1987. Beloved won her Pulitzer Prize; it
had been on the bestseller list for 18 weeks. Later that year, fourteen
honorary degrees were awarded to Morrison, and she was named as the Tanner
Lecturer at the University of Michigan.
In the fall of 1989 she left
Albany to accept the Robert F. Goheen Professorship in creative writing,
women's studies and African studies at Princeton University. She was the first
black woman to be honored at an Ivy League university. In 1992, she published Jazz
as well as Playing in the Dark (1992). She was also the editor of Race-ing
Justice, En-Gendering Power (1992). Morrison also published The Dancing
Mind (1996) and Paradise (1997).
In 1993, Morrison was
awarded the Nobel Prize in literature for her body of work.