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Is Hell A Pretty Place? A White-Supremacist Eden In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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In his essay, "Is Hell a Pretty Place? A White-Supremacist Eden in Toni Morrison's Beloved," one point author David Cosca argues is that the lack of information and communication given (or not given) to African Americans during slavery worked to break them down emotionally, psychologically and contributed greatly to the lasting effects of slavery. This led to the dehumanization and alienation of how African Americans were brutalized during this movement in time
Cosca believes, "whatever the reality of history is-and the point is, really, that we cannot know with any certainty, due to both the period which these events took place and the indifference of those who were transporting kidnapped humans across the Atlantic [...] Morrison's text also urges us to understand the consequences that this history has had on the society that we live in, and portrays that this sense of historical loss can cast a shadow on not just one generation, but on an entire society over several hundred years." (Cosca 12) In other words Cosca is saying that neglect and nearly a complete lack of documentation during the slave trade ripped away the history of an entire people, and left them without the hope, because without a family, who will help you? Cosca notes that Beloved, "portrays the perceived necessity of obscuring the familial relationships between slaves, both as a means of making slaves feel alienated and as a means to attempt to eliminate natural feelings of love and affection

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