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Beloved

Decent Essays

In Toni Morrison’s “Beloved”, time is rarely linear and this plays an important role in the outside applications of the story. Unlike other novels, Beloved remains ambiguous for the entire first half. There are merely effects without causes and mystery surrounding the characters. Baby Suggs is plagued in a comatose state of despair and apathy, while Sethe’s daughter, Denver, is childish. The only character who appears stable is Sethe who was abandoned by her sons and ostracized by her neighbors. This bleak scenario is only explained halfway through the book when it is revealed that Sethe had killed one of her daughters in a time of panic. This originally seems an odd placement yet, this placement supports Morrison’s intension of writing the book in the first place. As Morrison is writing a book about slavery in the 80s, she is not speaking of the problems within the African-American community in the present, but the effect of slavery on the community. Beloved is not a story of the present, much …show more content…

At the beginning of the story, you are simply faced with instability within both the characters as well as reality. However, the exact origin of the complications is not targeted, the reader automatically makes a judgment of the characters and accepts it. Without reading the entire story, the reader may feel only pity for Seethe. Yet, if the plot was revealed at the beginning, the reader may feel conflicted regarding Sethe’s character. Similarly, at the time Morrison is writing, drugs and crime have heavily affected the Black community and a large portion of society is not questioning the reason behind this but accepting it nevertheless. Morrison is drawing a tangible representation of this through her story. Without questioning the events within the story, as well as in reality, people will prejudge a situation without considering the full

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