Misrahi-Barak, Judith2020-03-252020-03-2520142198-7920https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/3026Twenty-five years have elapsed since the publication of Beloved. In all its complexity, Toni Morrison s novel forms a peak, both concluding the previous decades of neo-slave narratives and introducing the following ones. As the following article argues, reviewing the many ways the novel has closed a period and opened a new one will help us gain a new perspective and understand new articulations and developments in slav-ery literature. Misrahi-Barak contends that the genre of the neo-slave nar-rative has ceased to be African-American only, but has become trans-national and global, dialogic, polyphonic and trans-generic. It has also been instrumental in implementing a rapprochement between disciplines that used to be watertight.deBelovedrapprochementneo-slave narrativestrans-nationaltrans-generic800800Post-Beloved Writing: Review, Revitalize, RecalculateArtikel/Aufsatzurn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00103775-17