Oprah Winfrey–A Sponsor of Black Artistic Culture
Oprah Winfrey’s role in expanding the readership of African American literature and promoting the work of black novelists serves as a point of entry for better understanding how well-known and lesser-known writers gain exposure to commercial audiences.
Winfrey’s has featured novels writers such as Toni Morrison, Ernest J. Gaines, and Edwidge Danticat as book-of-the-month selections. She has served as an actress in movies adapted from African American novels such as The Color Purple (1985), Native Son (1986), The Women of Brewster’s Place (1989), and Beloved (1998) . She has even been a major financial contributor to the Broadway Musical version of The Color Purple as well as the made-for-TV film of Their Eyes Were Watching God.
Below, I have provided a recap of entries that focus on Winfrey’s role as a sponsor for black writers. In addition, since often times Winfrey is associated with the dramatic adaptations and promotion of novels by Alice Walker and Toni Morrison, I have included entries about these writers as well.
Oprah Winfrey and African American Literature
Oprah’s
Book Club and Toni Morrison
Oprah
Winfrey and The Color Purple
Alice Walker and Toni Morrison
Break
It Down: Song of Solomon
Break
It Down: Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye
Literary
Vantage Points: Multiple Perspectives of Toni Morrison
Struggles
for Freedom: Kanye West and Toni Morrison’s Artistic Renderings of Flight
Toni
Morrison’s The Bluest Eye: Black Girls as Central Figures
Playing
in the Sunlight: Colors of Imagination, or Toni Morrison Revisited