TM
Toni Morrison
Celebrity
Birth Date: Feb. 18, 1931
Birth Time: 11 a.m.
Birth City: Lorain, Ohio, United States
Aquarius
Degree : 29º2'49.89"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 18º16'5.78"
Moon Sign
Shatabhishak
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 2º49'35.72"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
TM
Feb. 18, 1931
11 a.m.
Lorain, Ohio, United States
Celebrity
Aquarius
Degree : 29º2'49.89"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 18º16'5.78"
Moon Sign
Shatabhishak
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 2º49'35.72"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Toni Morrison's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Toni Morrison's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Toni Morrison.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Female
Weekday Wednesday
Date Feb. 18, 1931
Time 11 a.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Lorain, Ohio, United States
Geo-location 41ºN27'10.15",
Timezone America/New_York

Residence Details

City Lorain, Ohio, United States
Timezone America/New_York

Time/Correction

Time (America/New_York) Feb. 18, 1931, 11:00:00 AM
Time (UTC) Feb. 18, 1931, 04:00:00 PM
Time (LMT) Feb. 18, 1931, 10:31:16 AM
Time (Julian) 2426391.16666667
LMT Correction -5.4789 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º53'1.21"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 41ºN27'10.15" Lon: 82ºS10'56.53"

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Diagnoses

Major Diseases | Pneumonia

Personal

Death | Long life more than 80 yrs

Vocation

Education | Teacher Writers | Children's literature Writers | Fiction Writers | Playwright/ script Writers | Publisher/ Editor Writers | Textbook/ Non-fiction

Lifestyle

Financial | Rags to riches

Notable

Awards | Nobel prize Awards | Pulitzer prize Awards | Vocational award Famous | First in Field Famous | Top 5% of Profession

Traits

Body | Race

Family

Childhood | Order of birth Relationship | Number of Divorces Parenting | Kids 1-3 Parenting | Kids -Traumatic event

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

American writer, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature on 7 October 1993 and the Pulitzer Prize for her novel of slavery, "Beloved," in 1988. She is the author of African-American literary classics "The Bluest Eye," 1970, "Sula," 1973, "Song of Solomon," 1977, "Tar Baby," 1981, "Beloved," 1987 and "Jazz," 1992. Morrison was the second of four kids born to one-time sharecroppers George and Rama (Willis) Wofford and grew up in the working class mill town of Lorain, Ohio. During the hard times of the Depression, her dad worked as a car washer, a welder, and construction worker while feisty mom wrote letters to President Roosevelt about the maggots she found in her flour. "My mother believed something should be done about inhuman situations." After graduating with honors from Lorain High School in 1949, Morrison attended the all-black Howard University where she changed her name to Toni. She performed with a theater repertory troupe during the summers that was made up of faculty members and students. Earning a Bachelor's Degree in English in 1953, Morrison moved on to Cornell University for a Master's Degree in 1955 and, after a two year teaching stint in Texas, returned to Howard as a faculty member, an instructor in English. At Howard she met and married Jamaican architect Harold Morrison and gave birth to two sons, Harold Ford and Slade Kevin. Disillusioned with marriage, as an escape, Morrison began to write fiction in the early '60s. "It was though I had nothing left but my imagination. I had no will, no judgment, no perspective, no power, no authority, no self; just this brutal sense of irony, melancholy and a trembling respect for words. I wrote like someone with a dirty habit. Secretly. Compulsively. Slyly." After divorcing her husband and resigning from Howard, Morrison moved with her sons to Syracuse, NY where she worked as a textbook editor for Random House. Battling her loneliness she once again sought escape in the fiction she began writing while teaching at Howard and developed the short story she had written there into a novel. The unfinished manuscript became her first publication, "The Bluest Eye," 1970. By 1977 she was the winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for "The Song of Solomon." Over the next ten years, Morrison taught sporadically at The State University at Albany, Bard College, Yale and Rutgers University to supplement her literary income and in 1989 she became the Robert F. Goheen Professor of Humanities at Princeton University. Morrison is best known for her exceptional ability to convey the experience of the African Diaspora while simultaneously infusing it into the mainstream of the American literary tradition. "Our silence has been long and deep," she wrote, "In canonical literature we have always been spoken for. Or we have been spoken to. Or we have appeared as jokes or as flat figures suggesting sensuality. Today we are taking back the narrative, telling our story. The narrative line is the way we discover the world." One of her colleagues wrote, "If I were to describe her writing I would say that she has the insight of a shaman and the lyricism of a great poet." Morrison's novel "Beloved" was made into a film in 1998. The movie flopped at the box office. In 1996, television talk-show host Oprah Winfrey selected "Song of Solomon" for her newly launched Book Club, which became a popular feature on her "Oprah Winfrey Show." Winfrey went on to select a total of four of Morrison's novels over six years, giving Morrison's novels a bigger sales boost than they got from her Nobel Prize win in 1993. Morrison wrote books for children with her younger son, Slade Morrison, who was a painter and a musician. Slade died of pancreatic cancer on 22 December 2010, aged 45. "God Help the Child," Morrison's eleventh novel, was published in 2015. Morrison died at Montefiore Medical Center in The Bronx, New York City on 5 August 2019 from complications of pneumonia at age 88. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

New Job

Jan. 1, 1970

Work : New Job 1970 (First book published "The Bluest Eye")

2

Prize

Jan. 1, 1977

Work : Prize 1977 (Ntnl. Book Critics Award)

3

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1987

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1987 (Release of book "Beloved")

4

Prize

Jan. 1, 1988

Work : Prize 1988 (Pulitzer Prize for Beloved)

5

New Job

Jan. 1, 1989

Work : New Job 1989 (Prof. of humanities at Princeton)

6

Prize

Oct. 1, 1993

Work : Prize 7 October 1993 (Nobel Prize for Literature) .

7

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1998

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1998 (Book "Beloved" made into movie)

8

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1998

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1998 (Release of "Paradise")

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Marriage

Jan. 1, 1958

Relationship : Marriage 1958 (Harold Morrison)

2

Divorce

Jan. 1, 1964

Relationship : Divorce dates 1964 (Harold Morrison)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Degree Completion

Jan. 1, 1953

Social : End a program of study 1953 (Batchelors degree from Howard Univ.)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Child Death

Dec. 22, 2010

Death of Child 22 December 2010 (Her son, Slade Morrison) .

2

Disease

Aug. 1, 2019

Death by Disease 5 August 2019 (Pneumonia, age 88) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali