Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to analyze and compare Master-Slave relations in two historical novels by African-American novelist Toni Morrison and Arab-American novelist Laila Lalami . The study aims at examining the formation of Master-Slave relations in Morrison’s A Mercy (2008) and Lalami’s The Moor’s Account (2014), with a particular focus on the role illness and healing play on their development. This will be done within three stages of before, during and after illnesses. Moreover, Hegel’s Master-Slave Dialectic theory will serve as the theoretical framework upon which Master-Slave relations will be examined within their historical and cultural contexts. Masters’ illnesses in both novels represent a turning point in the course of Master-Slave relations, providing Slaves with a chance to prove to themselves and to their Masters that the two are involved in complex and multifaceted connections. However, the study shows that the way illnesses affect the development of the relation in each novel differs drastically. In The Moor’s Account , illness offers an opportunity for Mustafa and his companions to add value to the services they offer to the Native American tribes they serve. In contrast, the emergence of illness in A Mercy negatively affects Lina’s relationship with Rebekka as the latter loses faith in the former and substantially downgrades her efforts and labors. The results of this study reveal the importance of external factors, such as the appearance of illnesses, in defining and affecting Master-Slave relations. Hence, by reading both novels alongside each other, the study highlights sociopolitical, cultural and historical aspects in the two narratives that have not been fully explored previously.

Highlights

  • Master-Slave relations are complex and open to different natural and cultural variables that play a great role in their development

  • This study analyzes and compares the Master-Slave relations in two historical novels by African-American novelist Toni Morrison and Arab-American novelist Laila Lalami with a particular focus on the role illnesses play on their development

  • Each stage presented in the theory will be applied to the Master-Slave relations between Mustafa and his Castilian companions and the Avavares in The Moor’s Account, and Jacob, Rebekka and Lina in A Mercy to better understand the role illnesses play in the development of these relations

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Master-Slave relations are complex and open to different natural and cultural variables that play a great role in their development. Both novelists blur the boundaries between fiction and history, leaving the door open to new and different possibilities in the Master-Slave relation than the fixed one presented in traditional accounts They offer a chance to study Master-Slave relations within a wider scope and explore factors that can work along with race and culture in affecting the course of these relations. Hegel suggests that this relation between the Master and the Slave is not fixed and there is a possibility of change in its unequal nature This possibility presents itself once two realizations are reached; the first is the Master’s realization that the independent self-consciousness he achieved is dependent on the Slave and the things he creates, and the second is the Slave’s realization of his independence through his work that results in shaping and forming things As the Slave is forced to work on the things his Master needs and leave them in existence, he realizes that he can leave his mark on the world (Stern, 2001, p. 99)

REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
BEFORE ILLNESSES
DURING ILLNESSES
AFTER ILLNESSES
CONCLUSION
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