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Analyzing Morrison´s Beloved

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The novel Beloved by Toni Morrison weaves a story about African American refugee slaves caught between remembering and forgetting what they have been through. Morrison, although evoking various complex emotions from her readers, has structured the novel so that we are unable to identify with any of the characters, especially Sethe, due to how slavery has deconstructed their lives. Slavery brings down these characters, causing them to lose their individuality. As a result of their sub-human treatment they are handled as if they were animals that are not up to the capacity of human intelligence; managed as possessions that know no freedom. Some may say that it is possible to identify with at least one character, but through Morrison’s use of …show more content…

She did not look at them she simply swung the baby toward the wall planks, missed and tried to connect a second time (Morrison 175).

White people in this time could never understand the physical and emotional harm that the slaves endured. In their eyes they do not know why a black person would try so hard to escape and do anything in their power to avoid their lives of slavery. Having a white person’s perspective included in the novel keeps readers at a distance from the characters experiencing the trauma, because now the readers also have twisted interpretations presented to them, rather than just that of the main character. White people talk about black people as possessions that bear no meaning, hence the lack of emotional connection.

Slavery was a daily routine for the black people who had become property and were treated like possessions as if they were animals. To some extent they may have felt as if they were animals, consumed with feelings of self-doubt and insignificance. Morrison uses animal imagery as a way to stop readers from identifying with her characters because as humans we are not meant to relate to animals. The characters in the novel are constantly being compared to animals. The slave masters view themselves as the superior species and black people as sub-human untrustworthy, wild, and uncontrollable

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