Abstract Despite the acclaim of Song of Solomon (1977), critics have largely overlooked the profound connection between Ruth Foster and the natural world. This article argues that Toni Morrison reconfigures Black women’s grief, erotic longing, and constrained domestic lives through queer ecological entanglements, revealing how sites of pain become acts of resistance and aliveness. Drawing on Jennifer Nash’s (2022) concept of slow loss, it explores how Ruth as a Black (queer) woman responds to persistent loss and proximity to death by cultivating Black beauty. Ruth’s driftwood arrangement becomes a Black feminist sanctuary, its flower-like watermark on the table serving simultaneously as a beautiful memorial and wellspring of vitality. The evergreen in her father’s study, where she nurses Milkman, symbolizes the persistence of erotic possibility despite the confines of maternal respectability. Meanwhile, Ruth’s lush garden bears the scars of the racial Capitalocene (Vergès 2017), yet she defies these intrusions by wielding it as a space of deviant pleasure, harnessing her Black aliveness (Quashie 2021) and erotic power (Lorde 2007). By reading Ruth’s ecological intimacies as queer acts of care – practices of staying connected to the dead – this article reveals the radical potential of non-human affiliations in understanding Black feminist queerness in Morrison’s work and African American literature.
Dorottya Mózes (Mon,) studied this question.