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Meridian is set in the American South during the 1960s
and early '70s. The heroine, Meridian, is a black woman from a southern
town. She marries, has a child, gets a divorce, sends her child away, and
ends up working in a voters' registration campaign, encouraging African-Americans
to register. Meridian is different from her co-workers in that she interacts
with people as individuals, rather than by stereotyping them. For example,
while others lecture black families about the importance of voting, Meridian
sits and talks with them, trying to address their basic needs of food, heat,
and affection.
As years pass, her co-workers quit and move into comfortable
houses. She moves deeper south, living in whatever housing the community
can afford to give in exchange for her constant work on their behalf. Frequently,
after staging a rally or other event, Meridian develops partial paralysis.
She grows more and more ill. A halo-like light surrounds her head as she
thinks of the history of her people and of her role in that history. She
ultimately heals herself and moves to the next small town. |