摘要:The article discusses how black women keep contacts with both black and white worlds in novels written by African-American female writers. In Toni Morrison’s (1970) The Bluest Eye , Pecola Breedlove keeps contact with the white world through her assimilationist behavior; in Alice Walker’s (1982) The Color Purple , Celie freezes herself in the black world by playing the role of the nationalist Negro; finally, in Lorraine Hansberry’s (1987) A Raisin in the Sun , Mama Younger joins black and white worlds together when she develops a catalyst agenda, as she moves to a white neighborhood.
关键词:assimilationist;nationalist;catalyst;black world;white world