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Psychological Abuse In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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As Kate Beckinsale says, “no one is more enslaved, than a slave who does not think they’re enslaved,” which emphasises that the enslaved can be physically freed but cannot be truly free because of the painful emotions of their past. During slavery, African Americans received physical beatings, which they eluded when they were emancipated; however, the psychological abuse they endured manifested within them, long after they were physically free. The spirit of Beloved is a physical memory of slavery that Sethe must face in order to start anew. Exposing the post slavery bondage many freed or runaway slaves experienced, in Beloved, Toni Morrison relies upon spiritual manifestation of painful emotions to depict the unremitting suffering of slavery’s …show more content…

Sethe is constantly reminded of her painful past at Sweet Home through the loneliness she experiences at 124. Schoolteacher treated her like an animal, abusing her, and allowing other men to mistreat her. She felt “lonely and rebuked” and the “loneliness wore her out,” so she decides to flee to 124 (8,17). For twenty-eight days after reaching 124, Sethe’s loneliness subsides as she spends time with her children; however “those twenty-eight happy days [are] followed by eighteen years of disapproval and a solitary life” after Schoolteacher pays her a visit (96). Despite Sethe’s justification for harming her children to protect them, the town cannot comprehend her actions and alienate her. She has “no visitors of any sort and certainly no friends” after she harms her children. She suffers from loneliness as a repercussion for being enslaved, until Beloved returns. Beloved forces Sethe to reflect on her tendency to push people away and to “protect herself by loving small” (92). Sethe oppresses the painful emotion engraved in her mind that “For a used-to-be-slave woman to love anything that much was dangerous, especially if it was her children she had settled on to love. The best thing, he knew, was to love just a little bit; everything, just a little bit” (27). Sethe “couldn't love em proper in Kentucky because they wasn't [hers] to love;” however, now that Sethe is free and has addressed the loneliness of her past, she can love Beloved because she is hers to love (92). By allowing herself to love Beloved, Sethe smothers the painful emotion of loneliness she has engraved in her from

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