Final Research
Final Research
Final Research
CHAPTER I
Introduction
ideal Western state in terms of lifestyle, fashion, art, music and a lot more. So much that most
non-Western countries often attempt to model the “American way” in order to feel more
validated and more in-tune with what is assumed to be “in vogue.” For the longest time, the
United States of America has had a strong influence on major political and economic
activities that have occurred across the globe. How did the United States of America obtain
such supremacy and why does it have such a strong influence on the rest of the world? Is it
country to behave this way? Several questions come to mind when one attempts to
understand the American state and on rubbing off the grease, one is exposed to the inner
stereotyping, inequality of opportunity, unequal pay, and the list goes on.
While every country has its flaws, the United States of America has a pattern due to
which these very flaws have come into being. In order to understand its origin, it becomes
vital to delve into the history of the country and how, over time, people from various
backgrounds have adopted a plethora of mediums to express the atrocities that they have
faced. When one attempts to delve into the study of African Americans, the most common
discussion that one tends to arouse is that of Slavery and Human Rights. But African
American history is so much more than Slavery. In fact, slavery, housing segregation,
blockbusting, racial steering, redlining, are all a consequence of racism. The problem lies
when one fails to identify the root and merely cuts the branches off; a temporary relief but a
permanent hassle.
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It seems as though at the time of its inception, democracy in the United States of
America seemed to pose itself as the most viable and effective governmental structure; one
that could not only accommodate diverse ideologies, cultures and beliefs, but also cater to
this extreme diversity. However, the progression of time has witnessed a slow regression of
thought and till this day, a black man in the States has to think twice before stepping into a
white neighbourhood and watch his behaviour which is under the constant scrutiny of a white
man. A democratic government claims to embrace the ideals of liberty, justice and equality.
These instances make one ponder, is a democratic government really the way to go? Or is it a
utopia that fails to fit itself into the harsh reality of the world? Is a democracy, in fact, the
Written in 2011, Childish Gambino’s Hold You Down, is a song that talks about the
insecurity, doubt and ridicule that a young black boy goes through, and how he is forced to
succumb to silence. One cannot help but ask, how is it possible that even in today’s day and
age- an era that glorifies the institution of democracy and the right to expression- that a black
man still feels unheard, uncared for, and unattended to? In a situation where every movement,
action and demand is scrutinised to the most miniscule level, there is often a sense of lack of
belongingness, insecurity of life and of status and the most tantalising, a diaspora; a failure to
be able to call “home” one’s actual home. Like Childish Gambino, a lot of other musicians,
poets, authors and artists have evinced their anxieties that are caused because of the colour of
their skin.
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It becomes vital then to analyse how the audience of such works receives these pieces
and the impact that they have on their audiences. One might mistake the work of African
Americans to be a call for help, sympathy or even pity, but it is so much more than any of
those things. These very talented and gifted artists hone their work so as to kindle empathy
amongst their audiences to create a better world; one where people can feel comfortable in
their own skin and happy with who they are. This analysis will be attempted by examining
the emotional implications of Toni Morrison’s iconic novel, Beloved. Prior to that, it is
important to trace African American history from its roots in terms of its timeline and the
The first black people who came to North America were not slaves, but explorers.
Among the most famous were Estevanico, who opened what we know today as New Mexico
and Arizona for Spanish settlement, and Jean Baptiste Point du Sable who founded a trading
post on the southern shore of Lake Michigan from which the city of Chicago came into being.
The first African Americans in British North America were brought to work as labourers,
arriving in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619 aboard a Dutch slave ship. Little did they know that
merely seventeen men and three women would change everything for their race. Initially,
these Africans were not considered as slaves but as indentured servants who could become
free if they worked satisfactorily for their masters for a stipulated time period. But by 1700,
the growing plantation economy of Virginia called for a workforce that was cheaper than free
labour and more easily controlled. By establishing the institution of chattel slavery, a black
person became not only a temporary servant but a permanent commodity or personal property
of the owner who could be used for economic gains. Under this system, the Africans
imported to North America were brainwashed as much as possible for his or her culture. The
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newly minted slave was relegated to a condition that the historian Orlando Patterson calls
“social death.” The system of chattel slavery was developed specifically to prevent Africans
and their descendants from building a new identity except with accordance to the dictates of
their oppressors. Instead of an individual being, slavery desired a being that by legal
definition had no family, no personal honour, no community, no past, and no future. The very
motive of slavery was to create a sense of alienation from all human ties except those that
bound the slave in absolute dependence to the master’s will. Self-reliance, a celebrated tenet
of the American definition of “rugged individualism” was forbidden to the slave since this
notion would not possess those who did not possess themselves.
One might wonder, why the Negroes? Why not British or Indian slaves? Indian
servitude and slavery were abject failures and the attempts proved futile. The white servants
were found to be unsatisfactory because their supply could not match the amount of work that
was to be done, and indentured servants had to be replaced every few years as their period of
service expired. The solution to these very vexing hurdles was the perpetual servitude of the
Negroes.
In such trying times, Virginia realised that their servitude would be fool-proof as they
could not claim the immunities accorded to Christians because of their colour, and larger
possibilities lay in the exploitation of black labour. All that was needed was the legislative
sanctions to give validity to the practice which was already blooming. The initial laws and
those of succeeding years were designed to secure in the whites the title of Negroes so that
they could be held in perpetual servitude. It appeared to be the only solution to the problem of
labour, and these colonists were not inclined to shift from the enslavement of a people if such
a procedure was to have a salutary effect on the economic life of the colony.
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In the last quarter of the seventeenth century, slave importations into Virginia
increased so sharply that some inhabitants began to doubt the advisability of the country with
ungovernable and irascible Negroes who had recently moved from a “barbaric” land. At the
close of the century they were being brought in at a rate of more than thousand per year, and
this very size of the importations emphasized to the Virginians the dangers of a large Negro
population. Consequently, the number of Negros surpassed the number of white inhabitants
which aroused a sense of danger and insecurity amongst the latter. There were rumours, real
and fancied, of conspiracies of rebellion. These rumours had much to do with the enactment
of laws placing heavy duties on the importation of slaves. Virginians had real reason to fear
the Negro population, for as early as 1663, the slaves gave evidence of being restive under
yoke and began conspiring to rebel against their masters. In 1687, a plot uncovered in the
Northern Neck in which the slaves, during a funeral had planned to kill all the whites in the
vicinity in a desperate bid for freedom. In 1684, lawlessness among the slaves had become so
widespread that Governor Andros complained that there was insufficient enforcement of the
code.
By the end of the seventeenth century, the slave code of Virginia was well
established. No slave was allowed to leave the plantation presumably on an errand for his
master without the written permission of his master. Disobeying the prescribed rules would
result in brutal repercussions which included being whipped, maimed, branded, lashed or
even hung to death. For example, for robbing a house or a store, a slave was given sixty
lashes by the sheriff, placed in the pillory with his ears nailed to the posts for half an hour,
and then his ears were severed from his head. Before the end of the colonial period Virginia,
like her neighbours, had become an armed camp in which the masters figuratively kept their
guns cocked and trained on the slaves in order to keep them docile and tractable and in which
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the assembly, the courts, and the custodians of the law worked for the maintenance of peace
Similar was the situation of Maryland where there was a healthy influx of African
slaves and a very strong implementation of slavery laws which were rebuked through violent
means by slaves subjected to that merciless treatment. The settlers of Maryland were under
no delusions regarding their function in the economic life in the New World, and if Negro
slaves would enhance their opportunities, neither the Catholic fanatics nor the contentious
During the Restoration period several acts were passed to encourage the importation
of slaves into Maryland. One of these was the Act of 1671 which contended that conversion
of slaves into Christianity did not affect their status. There was also a duty imposed on the
importation of slaves but it appears as though this duty was levied so as to obtain economic
Negro slaves were brought by the West India Company so as to cater to the huge
plantations that it owned in New Netherlands. Previously operated by the Dutch and called
New Netherlands, was captured by the English and renamed New York in 1664. It then
became certain that slavery would only expand. The Negro population in New York grew at a
very rapid pace and it was much later that the potential threat that this inflation could pose
was realised. There was suddenly a widespread insecurity amongst whites which called for
stringent measures and strict laws, barring the blacks from doing anything that made the
white man uncomfortable or could hamper his security. In the 1741, the hysteria resulting
from the fear of slave uprising plunged the city of New York into an orgy of Negro
A common observation that can be made is that slavery began in the Southern
colonies primarily for economic growth and enhancement of trade. It was a result of the
colonists to test other labour systems before resorting to Negro slavery. The tobacco in
Virginia, North Carolina, and Maryland, and the rice and indigo of South Carolina and
While the earliest justification offered by Europeans for the recognition of Negro
slavery was the salvation of souls, this seems to have been of secondary importance to the
colonialists in the New World. There were no strong evangelical churches at the outset, and
the furtherance of Christianity was viewed by the majority with sheer indifference. The early
view that Christianisation opened the way to “freedom” served to diminish what zeal there
may have been and officers of the church and state had difficulty in persuading planters that
Christianity had no manumitting powers. Gradually the doctrine that freedom was inherent in
Christianity began to wane and was supplanted by a point of view that was in itself a
rationalisation of the institution. This ‘rationalisation” was that slavery was good as it brought
heathens into contact with Christianity and led to salvation of their souls. The heathenism of
Africans, thus became one of the most important justifications to slavery. Further, there was a
racial basis. If it was justifiable to enslave heathens because they had not been exposed to
Christianity, the attention had to be centred on Negros, since other imported servants came
from Christian lands. There began to evolve an idea that it was the Negro who was the
barbarian and the race needed to be “humanised” in order to reconnect with civility. For
them, “by nature, temperament, pigmentation and civilisation- here, an assumption of a lack
By the middle of the eighteenth century, slavery became an integral part of a maturing
American economic system. There had been protests against the slave trade, some colonies
8
had imposed almost prohibitive import duties, and some religious groups, like the Quakers,
had questioned the right of one man to hold another in bondage. There had not been no direct
attack upon the institution and in the northern colonies too, where there was no extensive us
of slaves, the majority of the articulate colonists paid little attention to slavery. It seemed to
them that colonial problems required their attention more than anything else. It was in the
1760s and the 1770s that the Negros’ struggle for freedom was growing. While James Otis’
was laying down his protest in his work, Rights of the British Colonies the Negros themselves
were petitioning the General court of Massachusetts for their freedom. The Boston Massacre
of 1770 witnessed the fall of the first American, albeit of African descent, a runaway slave,
Crispus Attuck who was instrumental in bringing together “a motley rabble of saucy boys' '
against British soldiers in Boston. The significance of Attuck’s death seems to lie in the
dramatic connection which it pointed out between the struggle against England and the status
of Negros in America. Thomas Jefferson wrote “A Summary View of the Rights of British
America” in which he blamed British colonialists for preventing the blockage of slavery. In
their thinking the colonists had thus moved from the position of acceptance of the institution
of slavery to the position that it was inconsistent with their fight with England and finally do
the view that England was responsible for the continuation of slavery. This view was soon
translated into action in 1774 when the Continental Congress passed an agreement not to
import any slaves after December, 1775. These retaliatory measures, however, were
temporary in nature. The protest against slavery proved to be ineffective because there was a
disagreement from Southern colonists who stated that slave trade was not a consequence of
only British orders. During the War for Independence, the sentiment against the unrestricted
importation of slaves became so strong that the prohibitive duties were laid on such
importations and remained in force till the foreign slave trade was outlawed. Though
organised rebellion was unpopular, there was considerable opposition on the part of the
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individuals. There were several instances where Negro women killed their masters by
poisoning them. In other cases, workshops, houses and offices of white people were
ransacked and burned. The concept of slavery was played around with for the benefit of the
Americans solely to attain freedom from the British. The movement for the freedom of
America prevailed regardless of the demands of the Negros. The only point of contention was
whether or not the Negros would fight in the American War of Independence. Though there
were mixed feelings on the subject, several African Americans did end up fighting alongside
White men to free America from the bonds of Englishmen, and finally attained this freedom
on 4 July, 1776.
Manumission and anti-slavery societies became more widespread after the war. The
Quakers were amongst the first to propose manumission and were joined by many anti-
slavery believers. For instance, in 1785, the New York Society for Promoting the
Virginia and Massachusetts. This however, was once again faced by strong opposition from
abolitionists who were in fact concerned about the capital they had invested on slaves.
Consequently, slave trade once again flourished so as to serve capitalist demands and
gradually, the population of slaves increased. The rise in their population called for faster
trade, with domestic trade being introduced as a necessary activity. Slaves were hired by the
Born into slavery on October 2, 1800, in Southampton County, Virginia, Turner was recorded
as "Nat" by Benjamin Turner, the man who held his mother and him as slaves. When
Benjamin Turner died in 1810, Nat was inherited as property by Benjamin's son Samuel
Turner. For most of his life, he was known as "Nat", but after the 1831 rebellion, he was
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widely referred to as "Nat Turner". Turner knew little about the background of his father,
who was believed to have escaped from slavery when Turner was a young boy. Turner spent
his entire life in Southampton County, a plantation area where slaves comprised the majority
apprehension, surpassed by few." He learned to read and write at a young age. Deeply
religious, Nat was often seen fasting, praying, or immersed in reading the stories of the Bible.
messages from God. His belief in the visions was such that when Turner was 22 years old, he
ran away from his owner; he returned a month later after claiming to have received a spiritual
revelation. Turner often conducted services, preaching the Bible to his fellow slaves, who
dubbed him "The Prophet". Turner garnered white followers such as Etheldred T. Brantley,
whom Turner was credited with having convinced to "cease from his wickedness".
In early 1828, Turner was convinced that he "was ordained for some great purpose in
the hands of the Almighty." While working in his owner's fields on May 12, Turner said later
that he heard a loud noise in the heavens, and the Spirit instantly appeared to me and said the
Serpent was loosened, and Christ had laid down the yoke he had borne for the sins of men,
and that I should take it on and fight against the Serpent, for the time was fast approaching
when the first should be last and the last should be first.
to begin preparations for a rebellion against slaveowners. On February 12, 1831, an annular
solar eclipse was visible in Virginia. Turner envisioned this as a black man's hand reaching
over the sun. He initially planned the rebellion to begin on July 4, Independence Day. Turner
postponed it because of illness and to use the delay for additional planning with his co-
conspirators. On August 7 there was another solar eclipse, in which the sun appeared bluish-
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green, possibly the result of lingering atmospheric debris from an eruption of Mount St.
Helens in present-day Washington state. Turner interpreted this as the final signal, and about
On the night of August 21, he and a small band of followers killed his owners, the
Travis family, and set off toward the town of Jerusalem, where they planned to capture an
armoury and gather more recruits. The group, which eventually numbered around 75 blacks,
killed some 60 whites in two days before armed resistance from local whites and the arrival
of state militia forces overwhelmed them just outside Jerusalem. Some 100 enslaved people,
including innocent bystanders, lost their lives in the struggle. Turner escaped and spent six
been killed—sparked a wave of anxiety across the South. Several states called special
emergency sessions of the legislature, and most strengthened their codes in order to limit the
education, movement and assembly of enslaved people. While supporters of slavery pointed
to the Turner rebellion as evidence that blacks were inherently inferior barbarians requiring
an institution such as slavery to discipline them, the increased repression of southern blacks
would strengthen anti–slavery feeling in the North through the 1860s and intensify the
The early abolition movement in North America was fuelled both by slaves’ efforts to
liberate themselves and by groups of white settlers, such as the Quakers, who opposed
slavery on religious or moral grounds. Though the lofty ideals of the Revolutionary era
invigorated the movement, by the late 1780s it was in decline, as the growing southern cotton
industry made slavery an ever more vital part of the national economy. In the early 19th
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century, however, a new brand of radical abolitionism emerged in the North, partly in
reaction to Congress’ passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 and the tightening of codes
in most southern states. One of its most eloquent voices was William Lloyd Garrison, a
crusading journalist from Massachusetts, who founded the abolitionist newspaper The
Liberator in 1831 and became known as the most radical of America’s antislavery
people escape from southern plantations to the North via a loose network of safe houses as
An important figure here is Harriet Tubman who was an American abolitionist and
political activist. Born into slavery, Tubman escaped and subsequently made some 13
missions to rescue approximately 70 enslaved people, including family and friends, using
[2]
the network of antislavery activists and safe houses known as the Underground Railroad.
During the American Civil War, she served as an armed scout and spy for the Union Army.
In her later years, Tubman was an activist in the struggle for women's suffrage. Born a slave
in Dorchester County, Maryland, Tubman was beaten and whipped by her various masters as
a child. Early in life, she suffered a traumatic head wound when an irate slave owner threw a
heavy metal weight intending to hit another slave, but hitting her instead. The injury caused
dizziness, pain, and spells of hypersomnia, which occurred throughout her life. After her
injury, Tubman began experiencing strange visions and vivid dreams, which she ascribed to
premonitions from God. These experiences, combined with her Methodist upbringing, led her
rescue her family. Slowly, one group at a time, she brought relatives with her out of the state,
and eventually guided dozens of other slaves to freedom. Traveling by night and in extreme
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secrecy, Tubman (or "Moses", as she was called) "never lost a passenger". After the Fugitive
[3]
Slave Act of 1850 was passed, she helped guide fugitives farther north into British North
America (Canada), and helped newly freed slaves find work. Tubman met John Brown in
1858, and helped him plan and recruit supporters for his 1859 raid on Harpers Ferry.
In the spring of 1861, the bitter sectional conflicts that had been intensifying between
North and South over the course of four decades erupted into civil war, with 11 southern
states seceding from the Union and forming the Confederate States of America. Though
President Abraham Lincoln’s antislavery views were well established, and his election as the
nation’s first Republican president had been the catalyst that pushed the first southern states
to secede in late 1860, the Civil War at its outset was not a war to abolish slavery. Lincoln
sought first and foremost to preserve the Union, and he knew that few people even in the
North—let alone the border slave states still loyal to Washington—would have supported a
war against slavery in 1861. By the summer of 1862, however, Lincoln had come to believe
he could not avoid the slavery question much longer. Five days after the bloody Union
January 1, 1863, he made it official that enslaved people within any State, or designated part
of a State in rebellion, “shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free.” Lincoln justified his
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decision as a wartime measure, and as such he did not go so far as to free enslaved people in
the border states loyal to the Union, an omission that angered many abolitionists.
By freeing some 3 million enslaved people in the rebel states, the Emancipation
Proclamation deprived the Confederacy of the bulk of its labour forces and put international
public opinion strongly on the Union side. Some 186,000 black soldiers would join the Union
Army by the time the war ended in 1865, and 38,000 lost their lives. The total number of
dead at war’s end was 620,000 (out of a population of some 35 million), making it the
Though the Union victory in the Civil War gave some 4 million enslaved people their
freedom, significant challenges awaited during the Reconstruction period. The 13th
Amendment, adopted late in 1865, officially abolished slavery, but the question of freed
blacks’ status in the post–war South remained. As white southerners gradually re-established
civil authority in the former Confederate states in 1865 and 1866, they enacted a series of
laws known as the black codes, which were designed to restrict freed blacks’ activity and
Impatient with the leniency shown toward the former Confederate states by Andrew
Johnson, who became president after Lincoln’s assassination in April 1865, so–called Radical
Republicans in Congress overrode Johnson’s veto and passed the Reconstruction Act of
1867, which basically placed the South under martial law. The following year, the 14th
Constitution to people who had been enslaved. Congress required southern states to ratify the
14th Amendment and enact universal male suffrage before they could re-join the Union, and
the state constitutions during those years were the most progressive in the region’s history.
The 15th Amendment, adopted in 1870, guaranteed that a citizen’s right to vote would
not be denied —on account of race, colour, or previous condition of servitude.” During
Reconstruction, blacks won election to southern state governments and even to the U.S.
Congress. Their growing influence greatly dismayed many white southerners, who felt
control slipping ever further away from them. The white protective societies that arose during
this period—the largest of which was the Ku Klux Klan (KKK)—sought to disenfranchise
blacks by using voter fraud and intimidation as well as more extreme violence. By 1877,
when the last federal soldiers left the South and Reconstruction drew to a close, blacks had
seen dishearteningly little improvement in their economic and social status, and what political
gains they had made had been wiped away by the vigorous efforts of white supremacist
In June 1905, a group led by the prominent black educator W.E.B. Du Bois met at
Niagara Falls, Canada, sparking a new political protest movement to demand civil rights for
blacks in the old spirit of abolitionism. As America’s exploding urban population faced
shortages of employment and housing, violent hostility towards blacks had increased around
the country; lynching, though illegal, was a widespread practice. A wave of race riots—
Movement and its supporters, who in 1909 joined their agenda with that of a new permanent
civil rights organization, the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People
(NAACP). Among the NAACP’s stated goals were the abolition of all forced segregation, the
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enforcement of the 14th and 15th Amendments, equal education for blacks and whites and
complete enfranchisement of all black men (though proponents of female suffrage were part
First established in Chicago, the NAACP had expanded to more than 400 locations by
1921. One of its earliest programs was a crusade against lynching and other lawless acts;
those efforts—including a nationwide protest of D.W. Griffiths’ silent film Birth of a Nation
(1915), which glorified white supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan—would continue into the
1920s, playing a crucial role in drastically reducing the number of lynchings carried out in the
United States. Du Bois edited the NAACP’s official magazine, The Crisis, from 1910 to
1934, publishing many of the leading voices in African American literature and politics and
In the 1920s, the great migration of blacks from the rural South to the urban North
sparked an African American cultural renaissance that took its name from the New York City
neighbourhood of Harlem but became a widespread movement in cities throughout the North
and West. Also known as the Black Renaissance or the New Negro Movement, the Harlem
Renaissance marked the first time that mainstream publishers and critics turned their attention
seriously to African American literature, music, art and politics. Blues singer Bessie Smith,
pianist Jelly Roll Morton, bandleader Louis Armstrong, composer Duke Ellington, dancer
Josephine Baker and actor Paul Robeson were among the leading entertainment talents of the
Harlem Renaissance, while Paul Laurence Dunbar, James Weldon Johnson, Claude McKay,
Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston were some of its most eloquent writers.
There was a flip side to this greater exposure, however: Emerging black writers relied
heavily on white–owned publications and publishing houses, while in Harlem’s most famous
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cabaret, the Cotton Club, the preeminent black entertainers of the day played to exclusively
white audiences. In 1926, a controversial bestseller about Harlem life by the white novelist
Carl von Vechten exemplified the attitude of many white urban sophisticates, who looked to
black culture as a window into a more “primitive” and “vital” way of life. W.E.B. Du Bois,
for one, railed against Van Vechten’s novel and criticized works by black writers, such as
McKay’s novel Home to Harlem, that he saw as reinforcing negative stereotypes of blacks.
With the onset of the Great Depression, as organizations like the NAACP and the National
Urban League switched their focus to the economic and political problems facing blacks, the
Harlem Renaissance drew to a close. Its influence had stretched around the world, opening
By 1900, the unwritten colour line barring blacks from white teams in professional baseball
was strictly enforced. Jackie Robinson, a sharecropper’s son from Georgia, joined the Kansas
City Monarchs of the Negro American League in 1945 after a stint in the U.S. Army (he
earned an honourable discharge after facing a court–martial for refusing to move to the back
of a segregated bus). His play caught the attention of Branch Rickey, general manager of the
Brooklyn Dodgers, who had been considering bringing an end to segregation in baseball.
Rickey signed Robinson to a Dodgers farm team that same year and two years later moved
him up, making Robinson the first African American player to play on a major league team.
Robinson played his first game with the Dodgers on April 15, 1947; he led the
National League in stolen bases that season, earning Rookie of the Year honors. Over the
next nine years, Robinson compiled a .311 batting average and led the Dodgers to six league
championships and one World Series victory. Despite his success on the field, however, he
encountered hostility from both fans and other players. Members of the St. Louis Cardinals
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even threatened to strike if Robinson played; baseball commissioner Ford Frick settled the
professional basketball and tennis following suit in 1950. His ground-breaking achievement
transcended sports, however: As soon as he signed the contract with Rickey, Robinson
became one of the most visible African Americans in the country, and a figure that blacks
could look to as a source of pride, inspiration and hope. As his success and fame grew,
Robinson began speaking out publicly for black equality. In 1949, he testified before the
embodied by the Jim Crow segregation laws of the South: “The white public should start
toward real understanding by appreciating that every single Negro who is worth his salt is
going to resent any kind of slurs and discrimination because of his race, and he’s going to use
On December 1, 1955, an African American woman named Rosa Parks was riding a
city bus in Montgomery, Alabama when the driver told her to give up her seat to a white man.
Parks refused and was arrested for violating the city’s racial segregation ordinances, which
mandated that blacks sit in the back of public buses and give up their seats for white riders if
the front seats were full. Parks, a 42–year–old seamstress, was also the secretary of the
Montgomery chapter of the NAACP. As she later explained: “I had been pushed as far as I
could stand to be pushed. I had decided that I would have to know once and for all what
Four days after Parks’ arrest, an activist organization called the Montgomery
spearheaded a boycott of the city’s municipal bus company. Because African Americans
made up some 70 percent of the bus company’s riders at the time, and the great majority of
Montgomery’s black citizens supported the bus boycott, its impact was immediate. About 90
participants in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, including King, were indicted under a law
forbidding conspiracy to obstruct the operation of a business. Found guilty, King immediately
appealed the decision. Meanwhile, the boycott stretched on for more than a year, and the bus
company struggled to avoid bankruptcy. On November 13, 1956, in Browder v. Gayle, the
U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s decision declaring the bus company’s segregation
seating policy unconstitutional under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
King, called off the boycott on December 20, and Rosa Parks—known as the “mother of the
civil rights movement”—would be one of the first to ride the newly desegregated buses.
Jr. beginning in the late 1950s, the civil rights movement had begun to gain serious
momentum in the United States by 1960. That year, John F. Kennedy made passage of new
civil rights legislation part of his presidential campaign platform; he won more than 70
percent of the African American vote. Congress was debating Kennedy’s civil rights reform
bill when he was killed by an assassin’s bullet in Dallas, Texas in November 1963. It was left
to Lyndon Johnson (not previously known for his support of civil rights) to push the Civil
Rights Act—the most far-reaching act of legislation supporting racial equality in American
At its most basic level, the act gave the federal government more power to protect
citizens against discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex or national origin. It
mandated the desegregation of most public accommodations, including lunch counters, bus
depots, parks and swimming pools, and established the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) to ensure equal treatment of minorities in the workplace. The act also
guaranteed equal voting rights by removing biased registration requirements and procedures,
and authorized the U.S. Office of Education to provide aid to assist with school
desegregation. In a televised ceremony on July 2, 1964, Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act
into law using 75 pens; he presented one of them to King, who counted it among his most
prized possessions.
In 1952, the former Malcolm Little was released from prison after serving six years
on a robbery charge; while incarcerated, he had joined the Nation of Islam (NOI, commonly
known as the Black Muslims), given up drinking and drugs and replaced his surname with an
X to signify his rejection of his “slave” name. Charismatic and eloquent, Malcolm soon
became an influential leader of the NOI, which combined Islam with black nationalism and
America.
As the outspoken public voice of the Black Muslim faith, Malcolm challenged the
mainstream civil rights movement and the nonviolent pursuit of integration championed by
Martin Luther King Jr. Instead, he urged followers to defend themselves against white
aggression “by any means necessary.” Mounting tensions between Malcolm and NOI founder
Elijah Muhammad led Malcolm to form his own mosque in 1964. He made a pilgrimage to
21
Mecca that same year and underwent a second conversion, this time to Sunni Islam. Calling
advocated a more inclusive approach to the struggle for black rights. On February 21, 1965,
during a speaking engagement in Harlem, three members of the NOI rushed the stage and
shot Malcolm some 15 times at close range. After Malcolm’s death, his bestselling book, The
Autobiography of Malcolm X popularized his ideas, particularly among black youth, and laid
the foundation for the Black Power movement of the late 1960s and 1970s.
After the heady rush of the civil rights movement’s first years, anger and frustration
was increasing among many African Americans, who saw clearly that true equality—social,
economic and political—still eluded them. In the late 1960s and early ’70s, this frustration
fuelled the rise of the Black Power movement. According to then–SNCC chairman Stokely
Carmichael, who first popularized the term “black power” in 1966, the traditional civil rights
movement and its emphasis on nonviolence, did not go far enough, and the federal legislation
it had achieved failed to address the economic and social disadvantages facing blacks in
America.
Black Power was a form of both self–definition and self–defence for African
were believed to be inherently racist—and act for themselves, by themselves, to seize the
22
gains they desired, including better jobs, housing and education. Also in 1966, Huey P.
Newton and Bobby Seale, college students in Oakland, California, founded the Black Panther
Party. While its original mission was to protect blacks from white brutality by sending patrol
groups into black neighbourhoods, the Panthers soon developed into a Marxist group that
promoted Black Power by urging African Americans to arm themselves and demand full
employment, decent housing and control over their own communities. Clashes ensued
between the Panthers and police in California, New York and Chicago, and in 1967 Newton
was convicted of voluntary manslaughter after killing a police officer. His trial brought
national attention to the organization, which at its peak in the late 1960s boasted some 2,000
members.
On April 4, 1968, the world was stunned and saddened by the news that the civil
rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner Martin Luther King Jr. had been shot and killed
on the balcony of a motel in Memphis, Tennessee, where he had gone to support a sanitation
workers’ strike. King’s death opened a huge rift between white and black Americans, as
many blacks saw the killing as a rejection of their vigorous pursuit of equality through the
nonviolent resistance he had championed. In more than 100 cities, several days of riots,
The accused killer, a white man named James Earl Ray, was captured and tried
immediately; he entered a guilty plea and was sentenced to 99 years in prison; no testimony
was heard. Ray later recanted his confession, and despite several inquiries into the matter by
23
the U.S. government, many continued to believe that the speedy trial had been a cover–up for
a larger conspiracy. King’s assassination, along with the killing of Malcolm X three years
earlier, radicalized many moderate African American activists, fuelling the growth of the
as president and the third–party candidacy of the ardent segregationist George Wallace, who
won 13 percent of the vote—further discouraged African Americans, many of whom felt that
Just as African American history is extremely varied, their writings too are centred
around limited areas including the role of African Americans within the larger American
society and what it means to be an American. Professor Albert J. Raboteau states, “all
African American studies including African American literature speaks to the deeper
meaning of the African American presence in this nation. This presence has been a test case
of the nation’s claims to freedom, democracy, equality and the inclusivity of all.”
In its rawest form, African American literature seeks to explore the very issues of
freedom and equality which were long denied to Negros who were abducted from their native
land and forced into slavery and suffering by their American lords. The initial literary
24
expressions focused on the political and religious prejudices that were faced by the Blacks.
African American literature also constitutes a vital branch of African diaspora which not
only has been influenced by the great African diasporic heritage but also goes on to influence
African diasporic writings in many countries. Not only written but also African oral culture is
rich in poetry including, including spirituals, African American gospel music, blues and rap.
As a matter of fact, this oral poetry also appears in the African American tradition of Church
Therefore, to African American literature, its endearing impulse is the resistance to human
tyranny and its sustaining spirit is its dedication to human dignity and well-being.
Although the founders of the United States pride themselves on embracing the ideals
of equality and liberty, the racial chauvinism of most white Americans brought about a
difference in their religious and political responsibilities to the blacks. There were a variety of
conditions and hypocrisies posed by the Whites. They were content with the Negros claims to
an equal right to God’s grace so long as their salvation was independent of their desire for
independence or redemption of the white supremacy. The political avenues, the Whites had
an extremely optimistic view of their abilities and presumed themselves to be the arbiters of
with the Whites and the very first medium that they employed was the traditional Christian
gospel of the universal brotherhood of humanity. All they wanted was to be heard and treated
with the most basic level of dignity; as people and not commodities. One such exemplary
work was composed by Phyllis Wheatley (1752-84). She published her book “Poems on
Various Subjects” in 1773, just three years before American Independence. Born in Senegal,
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Africa, Wheatley was captured and sold into slavery at the age of seven. Upon being brought
Through these lines, Wheatly insists that Black folk have an equal claim to spiritual
ascension despite their skin, and having established that, urges the White folk to consider the
Wheatly and her contemporaries, Lucy Terry and Jupiter Hammon, seem to have been
motivated to obtain a populous Christian readership. The oldest piece of African American
literature known was called “Bars Fight” (1746) composed by Lucy Terry. This poem was
not published until 1855 in Josiah Holland’s “History of Western Massachusetts.” Others too
like David Walker, Maria Stewart, Frederick Douglass and Olaudah Equiano implored the
backsliding congregation to live up to the standard of their very reputed religion and its
prescribed code of conduct. Equiano in his Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa constantly refers to the Whites as “O, ye nominal Christians!” in
order to make them realise their lack of responsibility towards this very duty. While these
contemporaries focused on specific areas where they wanted to bring about change, their
influence branched into social and literary trends at the time as well. For example,
Wheatley’s poetic ability was a testament to the black man’s mastery over the English
26
language which challenged the hardened European prejudice “black people are incapable of
literary expression.”
Another important literary figure is William Wells Brown and Victor Sejour who
produced the earliest works of fiction by African American writers. Brown was an
abolitionist, historian, playwright and novelist. Born into slavery in the Southern United
States, Brown escaped to the North, where he worked for abolitionist causes and was a
prolific writer. He wrote the first African American novel, Clotel; or, The President’s
Daughter. The novel was based on the rumour that Thomas Jefferson was fathering a
Slave Narratives
are essential tools in the study of American history and literature and have played a central
role in national debates about slavery, freedom, and American identity. The recorded
experiences of African American slaves are also arguably one of North Carolina's greatest
was the most popular literary tool of black writers; slave narratives outnumbered novels
written by African Americans until the Great Depression. Along with their fictional
descendants, the state's slave narratives continue to challenge readers to explore questions of
primarily on the experiences of African Americans held in bondage in the South. Many
emotional, and spiritual deprivation. Their accounts stirred dialogue between blacks and
whites about slavery and freedom, as former slaves wrote both to enlighten white readers
27
about the realities of institutional slavery and to convince them that the black people were
deserving of full human rights. Published slave narratives began to appear throughout the
English-speaking world in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries through the
Works like Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) represented the evils of slavery while “Anti-
Tom” literature by White Southern writers like William Gilmore Simms were composed to
support slavery. The most popular slave narrator is none other than Frederick Douglass. In his
first autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845), he expresses the
hopelessness he undergoes for not knowing his birthday as early evidence of a “restless
spirit” which was further provoked by the institution (here, slavery) that he was forced into.
He recalls having an extremely miserable life not limited to just beatings and whippings from
his master but also suffering from hunger and cold. Another important narrator is Harriet
Jacobs recounts in her book, Life of A Slave Girl “I would rather drudge out my life on a
cotton plantation, till the grave opened to give me rest, than to live with an unprincipled
master and a jealous mistress” expressing her deplorable condition in her personal as well as
professional capacity where she was subjected to undue abuse and harassment.
Post-Slavery Era
After the end of slavery and the American Civil War, a number of African American
authors continued to write non-fiction works about the ramifications of slavery. Among the
most popular of these writers is W.E.B Du Bois (1868-1963), one of the original founders of
the NAACP. At the turn of the century, Du Bois published a highly influential collection of
essays titled The Souls of Black Folk. As the name suggests, the book discusses the grave
issues of race and Du Bois’ personal experiences. It contained his famous quote: “the
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problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the colour-line.” Du Bois believed that
African Americans should, because of their common interests, work together to battle
the founder of Tuskegee Institute, a college established for Blacks In Alabama. Popular for
his work, Up from Slavery (1901), Washington’s approach is different from Du Bois’ who is
rather confrontational in his approach while Washington attempts to ignite an urge in the
black man to work towards an upliftment of his own being and the Black society so as to
qualify for freedom and equal treatment. While this viewpoint was popular among some
A third writer who gained significant attention during that period was Paul Laurence
Dunbar who wrote in the local black dialect of the day, was the first African American poet
to gain national prominence. His first book of poetry, Oak and Ivy, was published in 1893.
Much of Dunbar’s work such as Malindy Sings (1906) which includes photographs taken by
the Hampton Institute Camera Club providing a glimpse into the lives of rural African
Americans of the day. Though Dunbar died young, he was a prolific poet, essayist, novelist
and short story writer. Finally, the first ever African American writer of fiction, Charles W.
Chestnutt produced a collection of short stories and three novels from 1899-1905. Born in
Cleveland, Ohio, Chestnutt was a slave himself and went on to become the most influential
and respected African American writer, reaching a significant audience with his analysis and
indictments on racism.
Harlem Renaissance
The Great Migration began because of a "push" and a "pull." Disenfranchisement and
Jim Crow laws led many African Americans to hope for a new life up north. Hate groups and
29
hate crimes cast alarm among African American families of the Deep South. The promise of
owning land had not materialized. Most blacks toiled as sharecroppers trapped in an endless
cycle of debt. In the 1890s, a boll weevil blight damaged the cotton crop throughout the
region, increasing the despair. All these factors served to push African Americans to seek
better lives. The booming northern economy forged the pull. Industrial jobs were numerous,
and factory owners looked near and far for sources of cheap labour. Unfortunately,
northerners did not welcome African Americans with open arms. While the legal systems of
the northern states were not as obstructionist toward African American rights, the prejudice
among the populace was as acrimonious. White laborers complained that African Americans
were flooding the employment market and lowering wages. Most new migrants found
themselves segregated by practice in run down urban slums. The largest of these was Harlem.
Writers, actors, artists, and musicians glorified African American traditions, and at the same
African Americans had endured centuries of slavery and the struggle for abolition.
The end of bondage had not brought the promised land many had envisioned. Instead, white
supremacy was quickly, legally, and violently restored to the New South, where ninety
percent of African Americans lived. Starting in about 1890, African Americans migrated to
the North in great numbers. This Great Migration eventually relocated hundreds of thousands
of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North. Many discovered they had
shared common experiences in their past histories and their uncertain present circumstances.
pride. Indeed, African American culture was reborn in the Harlem Renaissance.
The Harlem Renaissance is one of the most remarkable time periods in African
Based off Harlem, a black neighbourhood in New York City, the movement enabled a larger
flowering of social thought and culture with numerous black artists, musicians, and another
producing classical works in the fields from jazz to theatre. The renaissance, however, is
perhaps best known for the literature that came out of it. Among the most famous writers of
the renaissance is Langston Hughes. Hughes first gained attention through the 1922 poetry
collection, The Book of American Negro Poetry. Edited by James Weldon Johnson, this book
featured a compilation of the period’s most talented poets (like Claude McKay). In 1926,
Hughes published a collection of poetry, The Weary Blues, and in 1930, a novel, Not Without
Laughter.
Perhaps Hughes’ most famous poem is The Negro Speaks of Rivers where we talks
about the dreams, aspirations and desires of a young boy. He also wrote short stories. In fact,
Simple Speaks His Mind (1950), is arguably the best-known collection of simple stories
Another exemplary writer of the renaissance is the novelist, Zora Neale Hurston
author of the classic Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937). Because Hurston was a woman
and the fact that in her time, her work was not considered to be of social or political
significance, her work fell into obscurity for decades until it was rediscovered in the 1970s by
Alice Walker. She mentions Hurston in one of her most popular essays in which Walker
found a role model for all female African American writers. While Hurston and Hughes are
the two most influential writers to come out of the Harlem Renaissance, a number of other
writers such as Jean Toomer, Countee Cullen and Dorothy West also made a very
extraordinary impact.
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No aspect of the Harlem Renaissance shaped America and the entire world as much as
jazz. Jazz flouted many musical conventions with its syncopated rhythms and improvised
instrumental solos. Thousands of city dwellers flocked night after night to see the same
performers. Improvisation meant that no two performances would ever be the same. Harlem's
Cotton Club boasted the talents of Duke Ellington. Singers such as Bessie Smith and Billie
Holiday popularized blues and jazz vocals. Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong drew
huge audiences as white Americans as well as African Americans caught jazz fever.
The continuing hardships faced by African Americans in the Deep South and the
urban North were severe. It took the environment of the new American city to bring in close
proximity some of the greatest minds of the day. Harlem brought notice to great works that
might otherwise have been lost or never produced. The results were phenomenal. The artists
of the Harlem Renaissance undoubtedly transformed African American culture. But the
impact on all American culture was equally strong. For the first time, white America could
not look away. The Harlem Renaissance proved to be a turning point for African American
literature. Prior to this time, books by African Americans were read only by Black people.
Through the renaissance, African American literature-as well as black fine art and
The term “Black Arts Movement” describes a set of attitudes, influential from 1965 to
1976, about African American cultural production, which assumed that political activism was
a primary responsibility of black artists. It also decreed that the only valid political end of
black artists' efforts was liberation from white political and artistic power structures. Just as
white people were to be stripped of their right to proscribe or define black identity, white
aesthetic standards were to be overthrown and replaced with creative values arising from the
black community.
Larry Neal, one of the movement's founders, noted in his essay The Black Arts
Movement (1968) that this agenda made the Black Arts Movement “the aesthetic and
spiritual sister of the Black Power concept.” Like Black Power, the Black Arts ideology had
roots in earlier African American historical moments; also like Black Power, the specifics of
the movement arose in response to the integrationist ethos of the late 1950s. As such, it
marked an important era in the evolution of African American artistry, a moment when black
writers, visual artists, and musicians forged their own declarations of independence from
white America. Because of the proscriptive nature of its tenets, it also created much
controversy. Through its evocation of such resistance, the Black Arts Movement also
prepared the way for subsequent black artists, who have moved away from essentialist racial
In many ways the Black Arts Movement was a lineal descendant of the Harlem
Renaissance, or at least of the wing that privileged the art and experiences of “the folk” over
the high art of white culture. The link is so strong, in fact, that some scholars refer to the
Black Arts Movement era as the Second Renaissance. One sees this connection clearly in a
reading of Neal's essay alongside Langston Hughes's The Negro Artist and the Racial
Mountain (1926). Indeed, “The Negro Artist” was deemed sufficiently important to the
33
architects of the Black Aesthetic for Addison Gayle to include it among the selections in his
definitive 1971 anthology of the theory of the movement, The Black Aesthetic. The Black
Arts Movement overlapped with the articulation of the principles referred to as the Black
Aesthetic. One might say the former is practice, the latter theory. Hughes's seminal essay
advocates that black writers resist external attempts to control their art, arguing instead that
the “truly great” black artist will be the one who can fully embrace and freely express his
blackness. The hallmark of this, in Hughes's vision, is an artist's ability to reject bourgeois
posturing and to privilege instead the more elemental experience of the black masses, those
whom he refers to as “low-down folks.” This call resonates strongly with Neal's call for “a
cultural revolution in art and ideas [that] speaks to the spiritual and cultural needs of Black
people, regardless of whether or not whites approve.” Neal and his peers went a step farther
than their predecessors, however, arguing that it was not enough to reject white aesthetic
Such extreme terminology created, or at least exacerbated, rifts within the African
troublesome than the Black Aestheticians' rejection of Ralph Ellison. Ellison's Invisible Man
(1952) set a standard for African American fiction and established its author as a preeminent
man of American letters. Although the novel challenges simplistic, white-defined portrayals
of black identity, its fundamental ethos is undeniably integrationist. Furthermore, with its
evocation of classic white texts like Herman Melville's Moby-Dick (1851), Mark Twain's
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), and Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Notes from the
Underground (1864), Invisible Man supported the values of a traditional Western (read
“white”) literary aesthetic, even though Ellison extended those standards through his
concomitant celebration of black folk culture. For this, Ellison earned a number of
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“establishment” accolades, including the National Book Award. Also, in 1965 a group of
American scholars and authors named Invisible Man the most accomplished American novel
published since 1945. The 1965 designation came at the time when African American writers
were mounting the struggle to find a black literary voice that would shortly arise in the form
of the Black Arts Movement; the honour only confirmed these young writers' opinions of
Ellison as an assimilationist. This, by extension, also made him irrelevant to the movement
Ellison was far from the only figure whose work was deemed politically inadequate by the
Black Aestheticians; rather, one might best view their reaction to him as illustrative of a
tendency in the movement to make restrictive pronouncements about what art by African
Americans qualified as “black enough” for the movement's purposes. The profound irony of
this particular case is that Ellison, like the Black Aestheticians, sought to reimagine black
identity and to break it out of the strictures imposed on notions of blackness by a white
majority. Recognizing this link between Ellison and his detractors proves useful, as it allows
one to contextualize the Black Arts Movement in the continuum of efforts to redefine black
being. Without the Black Aestheticians' call for a strict separation of black and white creative
identity, African American literature likely could not have evolved as it did. At the same
time, however, the commonalities between Black Arts artists and those predecessors like
Ellison, whom they so pointedly rejected, illustrate why the movement was necessarily a step
in a process. Only with the expansion of notions of black identity can true creative freedom
come, and real expansion by definition demands movement beyond any group's rigid
A considerable migration of African Americans began during World War I, hitting its
high point during World War II. During the Great Migration, Black people left the racism and
lack of opportunities in the American South and settled in northern cities like Chicago, where
they found work in factories and mills. The migration produced a new sense of independence
in the Black community and contributed to the vibrant Black urban culture seen during the
Harlem Renaissance. The migration was instrumental in empowering the Civil Rights
movement which made a powerful impression on Black writers during the 1940s, 50s and
60s. Black authors were vehemently pushing for an end to racism and segregation through
During this period of time, there was a huge surge of activism taking place to reverse
this discrimination and injustice. Activists worked together and used non-violent protest and
specific acts of targeted civil disobedience, such as the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the
Greensboro Woolworth Sit-Ins, in order to bring about change. Much of this organizing and
activism took place in the Southern part of the United States; however, people from all over
the country—of all races and religions—joined activists to proclaim their support and
commitment to freedom and equality. For example, on August 28, 1963, 250,000 Americans
came to Washington, D.C. for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. They came to
have their voices heard and listen to speeches by many civil rights leaders, especially Martin
Luther King, Jr., who delivered what would become one of the most influential speeches in
“I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its
creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal." I have a
36
dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of
former slave owners will be able to sit down together at a table of brotherhood. I have a
dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a desert state, sweltering with the heat of
injustice and oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice. I have a
dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the
colour of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today.”
Between 1954 and 1968, civil rights legislation was passed. Fundamental and lasting
change was made during this relatively short period of time and its impact can be seen in a
myriad of ways in our society today. However, civil rights issues such as immigration, racial
disparities in the criminal justice system, the perpetual segregation of our nation’s schools—
to name just a few—remain and are in need of ongoing work. In 1954, The Supreme Court, in
Brown v. Board of Education, ruled that schools could no longer be segregated and that state
laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students were unconstitutional.
In 1964, The Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination in public places, provided
for the integration of schools and other public facilities and made employment discrimination
illegal based on race, colour, religion, sex or national origin. The document was the most
sweeping civil rights legislation since Reconstruction. In 1965, The Voting Rights Act of
1965 was passed. This legislation protected minority voting rights, barring states from
passing laws that would discriminate against minority voters and requiring certain state and
local governments with a history of voting discrimination to get approval from the federal
government before making any changes to their voting laws or procedures. And finally by
1968, the Civil Rights Act of 1968, commonly known as the “Fair Housing Act,” provided
equal housing opportunities regardless of race, creed or national origin and made it illegal to
One of the very first writers to do so was James Baldwin, whose work primarily
addressed race and sexuality. Baldwin, who is best known for his book Go Tell It On The
Mountain, wrote deeply personal stories and essays while examining what it was like to be
both Black and homosexual at a time when neither of these identities was accepted by
American culture. His idol and friend was Richard Wright, who he called “the greatest black
author in the world for me” is best known for his novel, Native Son (1940), which narrates
Another great novelist from this period is Ralph Ellison, best known for his novel
Invisible Man (1952) which won the National Book Award in 1953. Even though Ellison did
not complete another novel during his lifetime, “Invisible Man” was so influential that it
secured his place in literary history. The Civil Rights time period also witnessed the rise of
the first female Black poets, most notably Gwendolyn Brooks, who became the first African
American to win the Pulitzer Prize for Annie Allen. Along with brooks, other female poets
who became well-known during the 1950s and 60s are Nikki Giovanni and Sonia Sanchez.
During this time a lot of playwrights also got national attention. One of the most
popular amongst these was Lorraine Hansberry, whose play A Raisin in the Sun focused on a
poor Black family living in Chicago. The play won the 1959 New York Drama Critics’ Circle
Award. It is worth noting that a number of important essays and books about human beings
were written by the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. A popular example is Martin
The early 1970s witnessed the integration of African American Literature into
This was also the time when the work of African American writers was actually accepted by
38
academia as a legitimate genre of American Literature. As part of the larger Black Arts
Movement which was inspired by the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements, African
American literature began to be defined and analysed as a separate and important genre.
Writers like Toni Morrison and Alice Walker and poets like James Emanuel are credited for
African American poetry in the City College of New York heavily influenced the birth of the
genre. Influential anthologies of this time included Black Fire: An Anthology of Afro-
American Writing edited by LeRoi Jones (now known as Amiri Baraka) and Larry Neal in
1968 and The Negro Caravan, co-edited by Sterling Brown, Arthur P. Davis and Ulysses Lee
in 1969.
Toni Morrison, meanwhile, helped promote Black literature and authors when she
worked as an editor for Random House in the1960s and 1970s, where she edited books by
Toni Cade Bambara, Gayl Jones and other authors. Little did Morrison know then that she
would later emerge as one of the most powerful African American writers in the 20 century.
th
Her first novel, The Bluest Eye was published in century. Among her most famous novels is
Beloved, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988. This story describes a slave who
found freedom but killed her infant daughter to save her from a life of slavery. Another one
of her exemplary works is Song of Solomon, a tale about materialism and brotherhood.
Morrison is the first-African American woman to have won the Nobel Prize in Literature.
In the 1970s, novelist and poet Alice Walker wrote a very popular essay that brought
Zora Neale Hurston and her classic Their Eyes Were Watching God back into the attention of
the literary world. As mentioned previously, it was then that this work was actually
accoladed. In 1982, Walker won the Pulitzer Prize as well as the American Book Award for
The Color Purple, an epistolary novel. It tells the story of a young woman, Celie, who is
39
sexually abused by her stepfather and later by her husband whom she is forced to get married
to.
The 70s also saw African American books topping the best-seller lists. Amongst the
first books to do was Roots: The Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley, which also won
the Pulitzer Prize. Haley later went on to write The Autobiography of Malcolm X in 1965.
Other important writers in recent years include fiction writers like Gayl Jones, Rasheed
Clark, Ishmael Reed, Jamaica Kincaid, Randall Kenan and John Edgar Wideman. One cannot
discuss contemporary writers without mentioning the infamous, Maya Angelou, one of the
There was a difference between the kind of language that black writers employed and
the oral tradition that they introduced, however, the 1960s and 1970s witnessed the most
dramatic change in African American literature in terms of the involvement of women and
their work. This occurred as a result of the intersection of two movements- the black
movement and the women’s movement. Certainly, the increased visibility of African
American women writers exemplifies the relationship between the political movements and
literary canons. Earlier women writers such as Jessie Fauset, Nella Larsen, Zora Neale
Hustron, Ann Petry, Dorothy West, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Paule Marshall had placed back
women at the center of their narratives. Their texts, however, had not been perceived by
either the mainstream or the African American literary establishment as significant. It was not
that in the 1970s the African American women had suddenly become literary artists; rather, it
was that the cultural ethos was ready to accept them as writers who were engaging in the
The first novels written in the 1960s critique relations with black women and men,
and not just black women with white people. By concentrating on relationships within the
40
black community, these authors confirmed that it was to the blacks that they were addressing
their work. Rather than idealising black communities, as so many writings of the 1960s had
attempted to do, African American women writers of the 1970s articulated the complexities
of African American culture and history; at the same time, they demonstrated how black
communities had also deeply internalised racist stereotypes that radically affected their
In the beginning of the twentieth century, many African Americans were moving
from the rural South to the urban North, afraid of the increasing violence in southern states
and holding hopes for a better life and prosperity. That became known as the Great
Migration. As a consequence of this migration, in Harlem, New York, a black middle class
emerged. According to Marks “at the end of the 1920s there were 164,566 black people
living in Harlem, making it the most densely populated black area in the world”. In
conjunction with other different social forces, this large African American population would
soon make the place the headquarters for an important cultural and artistic movement, which
would become known as The New Negro Movement or the Harlem Renaissance. As Bernard
suggests in her analysis of the Harlem Renaissance, The New Negro Movement and the
Politics of Art, the production of the period is marked by contradictions and a struggle to
understand identity.
Feminism is of crucial interest to postcolonial discourse for two reasons. Firstly, both
patriarchy and imperialism can be seen to exert analogous forms of domination over those
they render subordinate. Hence the experience of women in patriarchy and those of colonized
subjects can be paralleled in a number of ways and both feminist and postcolonial politics
oppose such dominance. Secondly, there have been vigorous debates in a number of
colonized societies over whether gender or colonial oppression is the more important political
41
factor in women’s lives. For both groups, language has been a vehicle for subverting
patriarchal and imperial power. Colonialism operates very differently for women and for
men. There is “double colonization” for women as women are subjected both to general
women as Simone de Beauvoir observes in The Second Sex, “is everywhere enclosed,
limited, dominated by the male universe; high as she may raise herself, far as she may
venture, there will always be a ceiling over her head, walls that will block her way”.
Women’s oppression is the most widespread and the deepest form of oppression in society.
Patriarchy has assumed that women are naturally inferior to men, lacking rational thought. As
she is biologically endowed with the supreme task of reproduction to carry the human race
her husband.
There are three major circles of reality in American society which reflects degrees of
power and powerlessness. There is a large circle in which White people, most of them men,
experience influence and power. Far away from it there is a smaller circle, a narrow space in
which Black people experience uncertainty, exploitation and powerlessness. Hidden in this
second circle is the third one, a small dark enclosure in which Black women experience pain,
isolation and vulnerability. These are the distinguishing marks of Black womanhood in White
America. The Black woman thus faces the reality of triple-subjugation of class, race and
gender. According to Alice Walker, the term “Black Feminism” does not fully describe the
triple-subjugated condition of Black women. Hence she has expounded the concept of
“Womanism” saying, “I just want to have words that describe things correctly. Now to me,
‘black feminist’ does not do that. I need a word that is organic, that really comes out of the
culture that really expresses the spirit that we see in black women. And it’s just…womanish”.
42
In her widely popular work In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens (1983) Alice Walker
lavender”. While Black Feminism benefits the privileged Black women, especially those in
the academia, Womanism addresses issues of masses of Black women doing all kinds of
menial work. The word “womanish” stemming from the Black folk expression, “you acting
womanish” signifies that the woman in question is “responsible”, “in charge” and “serious”.
“Womanist” is a woman who loves other women “sexually and or non-sexually”. She prefers
and appreciates “women’s culture” and “women’s strength”. The womanist takes pride in
being Black and female. Womanism repudiates the conventional White norms of beauty and
glorifies women with “big legs, big hips and black skin”.
If the Black Arts Movement then failed black women by not taking their gender into
their agenda, the feminist movements of the period failed them by not taking race into theirs.
As hooks points out, a black woman looking for a theory that would encompass both gender
and race would be pretty isolated: No other group in America has so had their identity
socialized out of existence as have black women. We are rarely recognized as a group
separate and distinct from black men, or as a present part of the larger group “women” in this
culture. When black people are talked about, sexism militates against the acknowledgement
of the interests of black women; when women are talked about racism militates against a
recognition of black female interests. When black people are talked about the focus tends to
be on black men; and when women are talked about the focus tends to be on white women.
(hooks 21) One can argue that groups such as Native American or Latina women do get as
ignored as African American women, and as Barbara Smith points out in her “Toward a
Black Feminist Criticism”, lesbian black women are even more oppressed than heterosexual
black women. However, hooks’ words are true in stating how black movements tend to
43
ignore the female gender and how feminism tends to ignore blackness. As the theorist affirms
throughout her book Ain’t I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism, black women identity
can only be seriously thought of when race, gender and class are all considered together.
Black women cannot–and would not–benefit from taking a moment to think only of being
black, then another to think only of being women. They are all of it at once, and the
oppression they have faced is singular to them–neither black men nor white women have
OBJECTIVES
Morrison’s “Beloved”
· To analyse the underlying themes and their implications through Toni Morrison’s
“Beloved”
· To apply tools of the Reader-Response theory to understand the text through Toni
Morrison’s “Beloved”
· To analyse the impact of Empathy and Narrative Empathy and the readers through
AIMS
44
This paper attempts to enquire, question and analyse the extent to which one would go
to empathise with a character and his or actions, even if such actions do not align with
one’s own ethical or moral standing. It attempts at analysing the various techniques
employed by the writer to instil this level of empathy amongst her audiences, the impact
CHAPTER II
LITERARY ANALYSIS/REVIEW
American Midwest in a family that possessed an intense love of and appreciation for black
culture. Storytelling, songs, and folktales were a deeply formative part of her childhood. She
attended Howard University (B.A., 1953) and Cornell University (M.A., 1955). After
teaching at Texas Southern University for two years, she taught at Howard from 1957 to
1964. In 1965 Morrison became a fiction editor at Random House, where she worked for a
number of years. In 1984 she began teaching writing at the State University of New York at
Albany, which she left in 1989 to join the faculty of Princeton University; she retired in
2006.
When Wofford was about 15, a group of white people lynched two black businessmen
who lived on his street. Morrison later said: "He never told us that he'd seen bodies. But he
had seen them. And that was too traumatic, I think, for him." Soon after the lynching, George
Wofford moved to the racially integrated town of Lorain, Ohio, in the hope of escaping
worked odd jobs and as a welder for U.S. Steel. Ramah Wofford was a homemaker and a
When Morrison was about two years old, her family's landlord set fire to the house in
which they lived, while they were home, because her parents could not pay the rent. Her
family responded to what she called this "bizarre form of evil" by laughing at the landlord
rather than falling into despair. Morrison later said her family's response demonstrated how to
keep your integrity and claim your own life in the face of acts of such "monumental
crudeness."
Morrison’s parents were, like so many other African Americans, migrants from the
South, and the southern heritage influences her work, especially its major theme of African
American displacements. They instilled in her a sense of heritage and language through
telling traditional African American folktales and ghost stories and singing songs. Morrison
read frequently as a child; among her favourite authors were Jane Austen and Leo Tolstoy.
She became a Catholic at the age of twelve and took the baptismal name Anthony (after
Anthony of Padua), which led to her nickname, Toni. Attending Lorain High School, she was
on the debate team, the yearbook staff, and in the drama club.
Toni Morrison has, in the last two decades published six novels and an essay
collection that have transformed one’s view of American history and literature. For Morrison,
the history and literature of the United States and of our present world are “incoherent”
without an understanding of the African American presence. Her work always engages major
contemporary social issues: the interrelatedness of racism, class exploitation and sexism,
domination, and imperialism; the spirituality and power of oral folk traditions and values; the
mythic scope of the oppressed groups, between personal desire and political urgencies. Her
work also articulates perennial human concerns and paradoxes: how are our concepts of the
46
good, the beautiful, and the powerful related; what is goodness and evil; how our sense of
Morrison says:
“If anything I do, in the way of writing novels (or whatever I write), isn’t about the village
or the community or about you, then it is not about anything. I am not interested in indulging
myself in some private, closed exercise of my imagination that fulfils only the obligation of
my personal dreams- which is to say yes, the work must be political… It seems to me that the
best art is political and you ought to make it unquestionably political and irrevocably
As this quotation shows, Morrison insists on a visceral relationship between writer
and reader. In an early interview she says that her writing “expects, demands participatory
reading… [my] language has some holes and spaces so the reader can come into it.” Readers
throughout the world have responded to her call, for Morrison not only is a writer praised by
literary critics and intellectuals but is also an immensely popular one. Morrison believed the
black American experience was worthy of sustained aesthetic attention, and not just so that
white people could learn valuable lessons about race. “I didn’t want it to be a teaching tool
for white people,” she told Als of her work “I wanted it to be true — not from outside the
culture, as a writer looking back at it. I wanted it to come from inside the culture, and speak
to people inside the culture. It was about a refusal to pander or distort or gain political points.
I wanted to reveal and raise questions.” And Morrison did not only pursue that goal in her
work as a novelist. She also spent more than a decade working as an editor at Random House,
where she championed the work of black authors. It was there that she helped put in place the
raw material for a black American literary canon. Morrison’s parents were, like so many
47
other African Americans, migrants from the South, and the southern heritage influences her
Through “Beloved” Morrison employs various themes and symbols to depict the
physical and psychological effects that slavery has on African American. Morrison takes a
real-life event from African American history and gives special importance to the brutality
and torment of slavery to remind the reader about the abysmal past of her race. In an
interview with National Endowment for the Arts, Morrison spoke about how Beloved, her
“Sometimes you hear things or see things or write things, and you don’t know where they
came from but they’re very important and they don’t disappear. The writing is discovery of
what that really means. I wasn’t at all sure in Beloved that I would have a character called
Beloved. I said at the beginning [of the book] the house was full of poison or venom, but I
thought that was just the haunting. But the big question, it turned out, was who was in the
position to judge what [Sethe] had done. Who could say that her efforts to kill her children
under those particular circumstances were wrong? They couldn’t decide; even the courts
couldn’t. Some people wanted her to return to the plantation because she was property.
Other people, the abolitionist in particular, wanted her tried for murder, and that would
suggest that she was a mother responsible for her child. The slave system says she wasn’t,
that her child was just another piece of goods. I couldn’t decide, and nobody else seemed
able. I thought the only person who was legitimate, who could decide whether [the killing]
was a good thing or not, was the dead girl. But I was about a third into the book before that
realization came. So I had to make a living ghost called Beloved who then would react
mournfully, desperately, lovingly, or furiously, as a baby would if you killed it and it had
It is rather interesting that though Morrison adopts a very strong approach towards
racism and sexism in her works, does not identify herself as a feminist. When asked in an
"In order to be as free as I possibly can, in my own imagination, I can't take positions that
are closed. Everything I've ever done, in the writing world, has been to expand articulation,
rather than to close it, to open doors, sometimes, not even closing the book — leaving the
endings open for reinterpretation, re-visitation and a little ambiguity. It may also seem off-
putting to some readers, who may feel that I'm involved in writing some kind of feminist tract.
I don't subscribe to patriarchy, and I don't think it should be substituted with matriarchy. I
think it's a question of equitable access, and opening doors to all sorts of things.”
coined by African American author, Alice Walker to set aside mainstream White feminists
from feminist women of colour and primarily to resist Anti-blackness within the feminist
movement. It was felt that White feminists often did not understand, consider, or were
ignorant of the additional support and welfare that black women were in dire need of. An
excerpt from the primary goals of Womanists conveys their ideology as follows:
“We are actively committed to struggling against racial, sexual, heterosexual, and class
oppression, and see as our particular task the development of integrated analysis and
practice based upon the fact that the major systems of oppression are interlocking. The
synthesis of these oppressions creates the conditions of our lives. As Black women we see
Black feminism as the logical political movement to combat the manifold and simultaneous
“Beloved” won the Pulitzer Prize that April. In 2006, after polling hundreds of
writers, editors and critics, The Book Review named the novel the best American work of
49
fiction of the previous quarter-century. Her other novels include “Jazz” (1992), set in 1920s
New York; “A Mercy” (2008), which divorces the institution of slavery from ideas of race by
setting the narrative in the 17th century, where servitude, black or white, was apt to be
determined by class; and “Home” (2012), about a black Korean War veteran’s struggles on
returning to the Jim Crow South. Ms. Morrison’s volumes of nonfiction include “Playing in
the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination” (1992) and “What Moves at the Margin:
Selected Nonfiction” (2008, edited by Carolyn C. Denard). She wrote the libretto for
“Margaret Garner,” an opera by Richard Danielpour that received its world premiere at the
Detroit Opera House in 2005 with the mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves in the title role. In
1989, Ms. Morrison joined the faculty of Princeton, where she taught courses in the
Humanities and African American Studies, and was a member of the Creative Writing
Programme. She went on emeritus status in 2006. Ms. Morrison is survived by her son
Harold Ford Morrison and three grandchildren. Another son, Slade, with whom she
collaborated on the texts of many books for children, died in 2010. Her other laurels include
the National Humanities Medal in 2000 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, presented in
2012 by President Barack Obama. The Toni Morrison Society, devoted to the study of her
In her own writing, Morrison lavished the under-discussed lives of black women with
language. Her prose is lyrical almost as a default; it is rhythmic and vivid; it sings. In her
hands, to write lyrically feels like an act of both love and defiance. But in her most famous
novel, “Beloved”, about an escaped enslaved woman who kills her baby daughter to prevent
her from being taken by slave catchers, Morrison had to balance her tendency toward
lyricism with the starkness of her subject matter. Based on the real-life story of the slave
50
Margaret Garner, who, on January 28, 1856, Garner killed her two-year old daughter and
attempted to kill her other two children just because she did not want her children to be sent
to the plantation where she was forced to work. Morrison thinks that the horrible issues
related to slavery are avoided and forgotten in the traditional slave narratives; therefore, she
seeks to lay emphasis on the painful and forgotten aspects of slavery. Morrison’s novels force
its reader to recognize the existence and conditions of slavery in a nation that would prefer to
forget that such an atrocious act was ever committed. In Beloved, Morrison's epigraph is a
fitting opening for a novel about grace, love, and forgiveness. The epigraph sets the tone for
the opening chapter, in which a wilful ghost destroys the peace of Sethe's home — a home
that is free of slavery but still laden with servitude's emotional freight. Paul's words, wrathful
and forbidding in certain respects, also contain a promise: "For he will finish the work, and
cut it short in righteousness: because a short work will the Lord make upon the earth." In
simple words, it means either shape up or ship out, because God is coming back for the true
believers, gathering them up, and taking them to heaven with speed and finality. The ghost of
slavery in Beloved is literal and inescapable. Sethe, the desperate mother based on the
historical Margaret Garner, may no longer be enslaved as the novel opens, but she can never
forget what slavery as an institution did to her as a person: that it made her kill her infant
daughter, Beloved. When a young woman claiming to be the now-adult Beloved comes to
Sethe’s house, Sethe begins to believe that she may at last be able to forget: that if Beloved is
truly alive, then what Sethe did to her never happened, and so slavery may be erased,
forgotten, papered over. But it rapidly and inexorably becomes clear that forgetting is
impossible. The character of Beloved embodies three generations of slavery and is a symbol
of the ghost of the more general historical past of slavery just as she haunts the lives of her
mother, Denver, and anyone else who comes in contact with the family on Bluestone Road.
She forces the characters in the novel, most notably her mother, to first recognize the pain
51
from her past before she can begin to work through it and her presence causes all of the
characters to come to terms with themselves before she leaves. Not only does this story-
telling offer the possibility of reconciliation with the past or a better understanding of it on a
symbolic level with the character Beloved serving as a symbol, it serves some important
functions for the reader as well. Beloved, when viewed symbolically is more than merely a
character in “Beloved” but holds great importance as a symbol in the novel as well. These
stories that are contained within the complex character of Beloved in the novel by Toni
Morrison, many of which are mere fragments that cannot be truly pieced together until the
end of the novel, relate a vivid, stark and relentless portrait of some of the worst horrors of
slavery.
The novel presents a black community unwilling to confront their past, and thus
haunted by the embodiment of it. The author does not protest slavery, but is rather concerned
with its effects on the African American psyche. Beloved demonstrates Toni Morrison’s skill
in penetrating the unconstrained psyches of numerous characters who shoulder the horrific
burden of a slaver’s hidden sins. The novelist dedicates this novel to “sixty million and
more,” the estimated number of blacks who died in slavery. Moreover, she strongly insists
that her literary context is essentially African American and Beloved overtly invokes slave
narrative as its precursors. In 1873, slavery was abolished in Cincinnati, Ohio for ten years.
This is the setting in which Morrison places the characters for her powerfully moving novel.
Sethe, a black woman of extraordinary power, is the heroine of this novel who is willing to
sacrifice not only to gain her own emancipation, but also to prevent her children from falling
under the yoke of forced servitude. Sethe, a thirteen-year old child, who seems older than her
age, of unnamed slave parents, arrives at Sweet Home, an idyllic plantation in Kentucky
operated by Garner, an unusually humane master, and his wife, Lillian. Sethe mentions the
52
fact about her mother who was a slave too who worked in an indigo field from dawn to
nightfall. In fact, her mother was hanged. She recalls that many slaves were killed along with
her mother, and that Nan, a one-armed black governess, took over the role of parent and
taught Sethe her mother’s native dialect. In this respect, Morrison reveals that Sethe has lost
the sense of motherhood. During this period, Sethe selected Halle Suggs to be her mate. They
got married while she was 18, and bears him three children: Haword, Bulgar and Denver. The
slaves Paul D., Paul A, Sethe and Sixo lived in a farm ruled by the benign Garners, a
childless couple. After the death of Garner, his wife turns control of the plantation over to her
brother-in-law, the school master, who proves to be a brutal overseer. The situation has been
described by the writer to reveal the unbearable case of their lives. She expresses: There had
been four of them who belonged to the farm, Sethe the only female. Mrs. Garner, crying like
a baby, had sold his brother to pay off the debts that surfaced the minute she was widowed.
Then the schoolteacher arrived to put things in order. But what he did broke three more
Sweet Home men and punched the glittering iron out of Sethe’s eyes, leaving two open wells
that did not reflect firelight. As a result, the harmony of the farm was destroyed by the
inhumane behaviour of the schoolteacher who forced the slaves to desperate measures of
flight and rebellion. Hence, Sethe, tries to reveal the cataclysmic situation of torture, horror
and bad memories for trying to escape the plantation. Sethe and her daughter, Denver, reside
in a haunted two-storey house at 124 Bluestone Road outside Ohio. As a matter of fact, her
house was once a way station. Historically, the way station was a treasured salvation for ex-
slaves who lacked food, clothing, and safe passage among the whites. The way station also
served as a postal centre, and message drop. Chance meetings with other wayfarers
sometimes reunited them with friends and loved ones. In addition, the way station provided a
warm, dry and safe rest stop along the wearying road away from slavery. In that house,
Denver is a reclusive eighteen-year old daughter who once upon a time lived with her two
53
brothers: Buglar, Howard, and her infant sister, Beloved. Now they are “all by themselves in
the grey and white house on Bluestone Road” (p.3). Morrison exposes the plight of the young
woman Denver in that house that she cannot stand anymore: "I can't no more. I can't no
more…. I can't live here, I don’t know where to go or what to do, but I can't live here.
Nobody speaks, comes by. Boys don’t like me. Girls don’t either. (p.14). Thus, Sethe and
Denver lived in an isolated place and their peaceful time was ruptured by the unexpected or
unforeseen arrival of Paul D., a survivor of Sweet Home: the Kentucky slave farm where
Sethe, her husband, Halle, and their children were also enslaved. Sethe divulged to Paul D the
catastrophic events that caused her to run away from Sweet Home, then she surrendered her
sons and daughter to a woman in a wagon because she was worried about the family’s future
under the schoolmaster’s reign. Her description of the assault is straightforward; she tells
Paul D very succinctly about the roughness and cruelty of the white people especially the two
white boys-the schoolmaster’s nephews who beat her while she was pregnant with Denver
injuring her so badly that her back skin had been dead for years. She refers to the station as
follows: “Those boys came in there and took my milk, that's what they came in there for.
Held me down and took it…. School-teacher made one open up my back, and when it closed
it made a tree. It still grows there. They used cowhide on me and they took my milk they beat
me and I was pregnant. And they took my milk.” (p.17) They sucked out her breast milk and
lashed her with rawhide whips. She repeatedly used the words “they took my milk” to
describe her violation. Of the act itself, we learn only the fact that the two teenage white boys
hold her down and suck her breast milk. Sethe, the most prominent of the novel’s many
sufferers who bears the physical scars of slavery’s terrible violence upon her back, was still
continuing to wander the past to Paul D. In this sense, she recalled that she reported to Mrs.
Garner that schoolmaster’s nephew attacked her while he watched the atrocity. It is worth
mentioning that Morrison uses the technique of stream of consciousness because we are
54
travelling throughout Sethe’s mental journey. She, in a flashback, mentions the barbarity of
those four white men: schoolmaster, one nephew, one slave catcher and a sheriff. Under the
fear that her children would be slaves, she, in the wood, had murdered her daughter, Beloved.
She killed her so that no "gang of whites would invade her daughter’s private parts, soil her
daughter’s things" (p.251). According to her, death is a kinder alternative than rape; that
"anybody white could take your whole self… and dirty you, dirty you so bad you could not
like yourself anymore. Dirty you so bad you forget who you were and couldn’t think it up"
(p.252). She had killed her own child with a handsaw. The foursome wounded Buglar and
Howard threatened to bash Denver’s brain. Stamp paid, a former slave who ferries Sethe and
Denver across the Ohio River, tried to take Beloved’s corpse from the mother’s clinging
hands and give Denver to her. A mother killing her own child is an act that subverts the
natural order of the world. A mother is expected to create life, not destroy it, but with Sethe’s
case, she was neurotic and afraid at that specific moment when she imagined that her child
might face the same assault in future. Thus, she prefers to put an end to this situation. On the
other hand, one notices that she was very anxious about the feeling of Beloved, her murdered
child. She stated “Do you forgive me? Will you stay? You safe here now ” (p. 170). But later
on, it seems to us that Sethe tries to justify her deed by saying or declaring that “If I had not
killed her, she would have died and that is something I could not bear to happen to her”
(p.175). As a matter of fact, a mixture of motherhood images roils in Sethe’s tangled internal
monologue. Being the victim of slavery, Sethe often thought about her daughter and had lived
with her daughter’s ghost for years. Being inferior to others, Sethe thinks that this feature is
the best way to save her child from slavery, from being treated barbarically. For her, it is a
natural right to protect her child from the apparition of slavery, while on the other hand, it is
something against the law of nature. Hence, Morrison alludes to an important idea at that
time when Sethe’s picture appeared in a white newspaper. News about blacks does not
55
normally appear in white papers unless something terrible enough has occurred to capture the
white reader’s interest. Just as it is unnatural for the white community to acknowledge any
blacks, it is unnatural for a black community made up of ex-slaves not to protect their own
from white slave catches. That is what happened on the day Sethe tried to murder her child.
In that place, the beating she received for freeing her children cost her a piece of tongue that
she bit off when the lash opened the skin on her back. She recalled her humiliation at hearing
the schoolmaster instructing his nephews to catalogue her human traits and her animal traits.
The author mentions "the picture of the men coming to nurse her was as lifeless as the nerves
in her back where the skin buckled like a washboard. Nor was there the faintest scent of ink
or the cherry gum and oak bark from which it was made. Nothing. Just the breeze cooling her
face as she rushed toward water"(p.6). The realization that Buglar and Howard would soon be
larger enough for schoolmaster to sell disturbed her sleep. She, in turn, congratulated herself
for managing to save her children from slavery. In place of harmony, Sethe rewarded herself
with the satisfaction that she succeeded in rescuing her children from whipping, lynching,
starvation, and sale. Then she managed to escape from Sweet Home while she was pregnant
with her fourth child. She and her new-born arrived at 124 Bluestone Road. Because Sethe
actively worked to repress the rape and infanticide, rather than remember, mourn, and there
by heal, she was trapped by her memories: “her brain was not interested in the future. Loaded
with the past and hunger for more, it left her no room to imagine, let alone plan for, the next
day” (p.70). We can ponder Sethe as a tragic heroine of this story. Because of her outrageous
act of self-sufficiency, her neighbours rescind the sympathy and camaraderie usually
extended to ex-slaves, and they exile her in the land of freedom that she risked everything to
attain. After Baby Sugg’s death, Sethe’s mother-in-law, mourners refuse to enter 124 or
partake of Sethe’s food. As a result, she had lost harmony. In turn, she suffered from blame
and alienation. Before Beloved’s death, Sethe’s infant child, the community of ex-slaves
56
shared their miseries in the warmth of Baby Sugg’s house and shared spontaneous bursts of
revelation and rejoicing in the cleaning. Not only was Sethe the victim of the brutal white
society, but also the victim of her husband. She suffered from her husband who was supposed
to be her protector from the external world. Here, Halle, the husband, mistreated her. He, to a
certain extent, let the schoolmaster’s nephew to steal her breast milk while he was hidden in
the barn loft. Traumatized by his wife’s suffering, Halle eventually lost his mind because “it
broke him” (p.69). Being a victim of slavery, Sethe was deprived even from a natural right as
a living human being when she naively requested a marriage service to honour her union with
Halle. Here, it is worth mentioning that slaves do not have the same type of marital
conventions as whites. Finally, she enjoyed her brief honeymoon in Mr. Garner’s cornfield.
The plight of slavery will shift from Sethe to Paul D Garner, a former slave from
Sweet Home who survived the horrors of slavery and had evolved into a resourceful,
contemplative man. He pondered his servitude after schoolmaster took over the management
of Sweet Home, the slave realized that they had nurtured a false sense of security. Paul D. has
undergone terrible, dehumanizing experiences which had toughened him and made him
nearly impervious to hardship and pain. Morrison reminds us of his toughness when she
describes his working conditions at the slaughterhouse. Paul D., we know by now, is not a
man who is easily shocked. He is horrified, terrified by the nature of Sethe’s crime and by her
inability to comprehend why her actions were wrong. His entrance into Sethe's life
represented the potential for a happier future for her and Denver. The writer reflects the ill-
treatment and the dehumanizing of those black people especially Paul D. who relives the
savage treatment that he endured while shackled to ten other slaves and transported to a
brutal prison for the crime of threatening to kill Brandywine, the man who bought him from
schoolmaster after the attempted escape from Sweet Home . Eighty-six days into his sentence
57
, Paul D. and the other prisoners, chained together and threatened with suffocation under a
mudslide, dived beneath their cell’s restraining bars and escaped. The prisoners fled to a
Cherokee Camp, where native Americans fed them mush and released them from their leg
irons. Those black people could comfort each other by applying fingers and hands as a kind
of tangible blessing. As a matter of fact, those characters were incapable of obliterating the
hurtful memories of enslavement. Here, we notice that Paul D. suffered from the bad
memories of his experience that he was stifled by an iron bit as he waited for transportation to
Camp in Alfred, Georgia. Paul D. informed Sethe that the worst of his humiliation after being
captured by schoolmaster was the glare of mister, the deformed rooster that he helped hatch
from his shell. He declared confession of pain and degradation. The bestial image of mister,
the regal rooster, smiling from his tub, destroyed Paul D’s remaining sense of humanity as he
waited to be carted off to prison. He was stripped of his human dignity and treated like an
animal. He mourned the man of Sweet Home, “one crazy, one sold, one missing, one hurt,
and me licking iron with my hands crossed behind me” (p.195). He questioned the reason for
human suffering and the extent to which a man must bear the burden. The novelist makes it
clear in this novel that the victimization of former slaves does not stop with their escape from
slave states. The brutality of the schoolmaster is unbelievable in the sense that he indicated
that he would sell Paul D. for $900 and replace him with two young male slaves so that
“Sweet Home would be worth the trouble it was causing him” (p. 77). Schoolmaster
struggled to take Paul D. alive but eventually determined that Sixo was of no use to Sweet
Home. He, in a very savage way, lit a fire and roosted Sixo who was tied at the waist to a
tree, then the schoolmaster shot Sixo to quiet his singing to his unborn child; They came to
capture,…. By the light of the homing fire Sixo straightens. He is through with his song. He
laughs…. His feet are cooking; the cloth of his trousers smokes. He laughs. Something is
funny. Paul D. guesses what it is when Sixo interrupts his laughter to call out, “Seven-O!
58
seven-O!” (p. 226). Both of them, Sethe and Paul D., were dehumanized during their slave
experiences; their responses to the experience differed due to their different roles. She
suffered a lot, her separation from her husband and the trauma of a severe lashing caused her
to be a miserable woman. Hence, the arrival of Paul D. offered a serious challenge to the
permanence of Sethe’s suspended life, for within hours of his arrival, his presence had
inspired Sethe not only to recite details of her traumatic past, but also to mourn that past:
“may be this one time she could remind the baby girl Sethe killed come in the form of a
mirror shattering, tiny handprints appearing on a cake, and a pool of red light undulating in
front of a door” (p. 204). Beloved herself is the traumatic past in bodily form. Morrison links
her not only to the murdered baby, but also to the other experiences of trauma that Sethe as
well as the other community members, lived through during slavery and middle passage.8
Once Sethe believes that Beloved is her baby returned to flesh, she thinks she has been freed
from the pain of that trauma “ I couldn’t lay down nowhere in peace, back them” (p. 79). She
thinks, recalling her daughter’s death “now I can, I can sleep like the drowned, have mercy.
She came back to me, my daughter, and she is mine” (p. 204). Because she is living with the
embodiment of her catastrophic past, Sethe is being smothered; her life revolves entirely
around her past. Not only does Sethe suffer from the nightmares of her past life and what she
did, but we see that her living daughter, Denver, suffers from the same trouble or effect.
Denver, a solitary child-woman, takes refuge in a circle of box-wood shrubs and inhales the
fragrance of cologne. Sethe makes plain to Paul D. that Denver is the centre of her life and
the sole concern of her daily existence. Her brief comment that the jail rats “bit everything in
there but her” (p. 224), delineates the extent of Sethe’s protection. Although Denver has
never been lived as a slave, she suffers from the ramifications of her mother's experiences and
the magnitude of discovery caused her to withdraw from the community and to retreat into
the sheltered but unhealthy 124. Denver; after the death of Baby Suggs, she lost her trust,
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even in herself because Baby Suggs played an important role to lead Denver to the right path.
Baby Suggs, the spiritual guide, taught her to appreciate and love her own body. Now, the
hope of Denver’s future is Beloved, who returns to fill the emptiness left by Sugg’s death. It
is worth mentioning that the intrusion of Paul D. helps Sethe and Denver to forget their
terrible life, but that visitor who is the embodiment of Sethe’s daughter, Beloved, destroyed
their harmony. In this respect, Beloved embodies not just the spirit of the child Sethe killed
but also all of the past pain and suffering from which Sethe and Denver have never been able
to escape. 9 Thus Beloved is their voice and their experience. Here, Morrison shows us that
Beloved is a multifaceted character: she is the ghost of a child, the ghost of the nameless
slaves, the ghost of a terrible but inescapable past. Sethe and Denver will have to learn to
overcome Beloved’s power, the power of the past- before they can create a life for
themselves in the future. Like Sethe, Denver examines her seclusion which is made bearable
now by the company of her ghostly sister. Isolated and longing for sisterly communion,
Denver loves this visitor saying that “ she is mine, Beloved. She is mine” ( p.125). Serving a
self-imposed sentence of nameless fear, alienation, and yearning, Denver retreats to the
“secret house,” the green chapel that shuts out the hurt. Denver prefers to cling to the
presence of the ghost of Beloved and resenting Paul D. 's intrusion into her and her mother’s
lives. In this sense, Paul D, the intruding male figure in a female-dominated environment,
disturbs Denver. So, after three days, she demands to know whether Paul D intends to stay or
not. Paul D. knows enough of the past-slavery era to realize that it is dangerous for “a used
to- be slave woman to love anything that much After Beloved disappears, Sethe becomes
immersed in her mourning. Paul D reminds her that there is life beyond their pain: “Me and
you, we got more yesterday than anybody. We need some kind of tomorrow” ( p.273). She
refocuses on herself by asking “me?, me?” Knowledge is the path toward recovery; thus
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Morrison focuses the end of the novel upon the possibilities of healing and future happiness
for the black community, and in particular, for Sethe and Paul D.
Not all critics praised Beloved, however. African American conservative social critic
Stanley Crouch, for instance, complained in his review in The New Republic that the novel
"reads largely like a melodrama lashed to the structural conceits of the miniseries," and that
Beloved is the first of three novels about love and African American history,
sometimes called the Beloved Trilogy. Morrison said that they are intended to be read
together, explaining, "The conceptual connection is the search for the beloved – the part of
the self that is you, and loves you, and is always there for you." The second novel in the
trilogy, Jazz, came out in 1992. Told in language that imitates the rhythms of jazz music, the
novel is about a love triangle during the Harlem Renaissance in New York City. That year
she also published her first book of literary criticism, Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the
American literature.
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THEMES IN BELOVED
hard-hitting reality that expresses a very grave amount of atrocity and trauma that the
characters have experienced and attempted to overcome. Morrison uses certain specific
Isolation
There is an obvious theme of isolation in Beloved. There was the separation of Sethe
and Denver from the rest of the world. There was also the loneliness of each main character
throughout the book. There were also other areas of the book where the idea of detachment
from something was obvious. People's opinions about the house made them stay away and
there was also the inner detachment of Sethe from herself. The theme that Toni Morrison had
One of the main characters suffered most from this theme of isolation indefinitely;
Sethe. Through her life she was forced to make many indelicate decisions which could have
cost her, her life, but comparatively the only life that was lost was her daughter’s. The way
her daughter was conceived was not what Sethe wanted. When a woman is raped, she loses a
part of herself and a piece of dignity. Sethe became detached from herself for she felt that
nothing in the world could do right if something like this could happen to her.
Not only did she have to deal with that fact, which created some inner isolation, she
also had to make the decision whether or not to kill her daughter or let her suffer through a
life of slavery. She made the decision to have her daughter killed. This also created some
detachment from herself. Perhaps she felt as if her mind had deceived her because she had
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her daughter killed. But yet, she knew that it was in the best interest of the child for she
Sethe however goes through many instances where this probably happened. Another
example of how Sethe could have felt det from herself as well as segregated from the rest of
the world, could be of how other people thought of her and her family and what they did to
show it. People are cruel, some just show it more than others. I felt bad for Denver and how
she was teased at school. They would tease her and accuse her mother of being a witch,
which we know is not true But what it shows is how Denver becomes isolated from the world
during the years where friends are needed. I'm sure that at one point or another Denver told
Sethe about what was happening at school, which pushed her more and more away from
society.
The public in the novel did not much interaction with the characters. This might be
considered as the author's way of proving the theme of isolation. The theme is further
reflected in the isolation of Sethe from her inner self, Denver and her separation from society
because of the children at school and finally, the very evident detachment of Sethe's family
from the rest of the world because of her past and what people think of the house and the
Dehumanising of Slaves
Slavery is also significant so far as the dehumanizing of the slaves is concerned and
the white people had the power to dehumanize because they were the masters, thus superior
to the blacks. The white masters are depicted as devoid of emotion and sense of
responsibility. Baby Suggs’s husband escaped from slavery. Halle Suggs who is the husband
of Seth has brought his mother’s (Baby Suggs) freedom from slavery. It was a great event in
his past. He had to work continuously countless years without any rest or wage. Paul D was
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forced to watch his wife be assaulted by his masters for a year. Such was the helpless and
pathetic condition of the slaves. They were not only helpless but also hapless. The white
people had the power to dehumanize the slaves. Slaves were not considered as human beings,
but they were considered either as property or animals. The slaves were unable to clasp any
stable identity to define themselves. Slave women were regarded as breeders in the sense that
they would give free future slaves by giving birth to children. The use of the words such as
‘slaves’, ‘niggers’, ‘beast’, ‘animals’- degraded the slaves. The white schoolteacher used the
classified and noted the good and bad things of the slaves. He also noted down the “human”
and “animal” behaviours of the slaves. The slaves tried to forget their past so that they could
move on with their lives but ownership over their own body when their being was determined
by somebody else. Stamp Paid in Beloved mentions white men having the power over
language, that they employed to incessantly scold and taunt their slaves. They had a
preconceived notion that the African American people had dark forest inside of them that
needed to be contained, if not entirely destroyed. So, they designated them as debased,
barbaric, and uncivilized. “White people believed that whatever the manners, under every
dark skin was a jungle. Swift unnavigable waters, swinging screaming baboons, sleeping
snakes, red gums ready for their sweet white blood. In a way… they were right… But it
wasn’t the jungle blacks brought with them to this place… It was the jungle white folks
planted in them. And it grew. It spread… until it invaded the whites who had made it….
Made them bloody, silly, worse than even they wanted to be, so scared were they of the
jungle they had made. The screaming baboon lived under their own white skin; the red gums
were their own.” (p. 99) They thought that their culture was uncivilized, and they were a
primitive race of people. They all had been tortured and their culture had been mangled. It is
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through the character of Mr. Bodwin’s realisation at the end of the novel that brings about
Sethe’s life was full of ups and downs. There several traces of complete
dehumanization of Sethe in the story. In fact, it is her character around which the central plot
revolves. Her body is a text of slavery. Sethe mentions that there is a tree with numerous
branches growing on her back. Sethe said “I got a tree on my back…” (Morrison,7). This
means that there are lots of lashes on Sethe’s back caused by the whip of the two nephews of
the schoolteacher. The symbol of this “tree” reflects the physical cruelty of slavery. These
scars on her back project the desperate attempt to dehumanize her. Sethe tells Paul D thus:
“After I left you, those boys came in there and took my milk. That’s what they came in there
for. Held me down and took it. I told Mrs. Garner on em. She had that lump and couldn’t
speak but her eyes rolled out tears. Them boys found out I told on em. Schoolteacher made
one open my back, and when it closed it made a tree. It grows there still. '' (p.8) Further,
Sethe has to sell herself for ten minutes in order to inscribe the words ‘Beloved’ on the
tombstone of her first dead daughter. “But those ten minutes...were longer than life, more
alive, more pulsating than the baby blood that soaked her fingers like oil” (p.2 ). Sethe was so
deeply immersed in her past that she would often forget about her present.
Theme of Memory
imagined. They provide a framework for creating meaning in one's own life as well as in the
consciousness. Sethe endures the tyranny of the self-imposed prison of memory. She
expresses an insatiable obsession with her memories, with the past. Sethe is compelled to
explore and explain an overwhelming sense of yearning, longing, thirst for something beyond
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herself, her daughter, her Beloved. Though Beloved becomes a physical manifestation of
these memories, her will is essentially defined by and tied to the thoughts, experiences and
identity is complicated, convoluted, and nearly consumed by her memory. Morrison suggests
at least implicitly that Sethe's crisis is by no means unique. Rather than a positive or negative
trait, memory (and the self-destructive powers contained within it) may be an unavoidable
Like Mr. Bodwin who hid his childhood treasures in the yard at 124, Sethe attempts to
bury her most precious possessions in order to protect them literally and metaphorically.
"Whites might dirty her all right, but not her best thing...the part of her that was clean" (251).
Sethe cannot bear for her children to possibly suffer the pain and humiliations she has
endured. She would rather live with the memories of her crimes, the memories of how her
children might have been, than surrender her future and theirs to school teacher. Her decision
to kill her children and herself is simultaneously an act of self-affirmation and self-
Memories, however, persist. They remain, lurking in places like 124 and Sweet
Home to remind Sethe that the punishment she suffers is self-inflicted and self-perpetuating.
First as a poltergeist and later as a mysterious young woman, the memory of Beloved remains
unrequited. Beloved's appetite is insatiable. She "never got enough of anything... the more
she took, the more Sethe began to talk, explain.." (240-1). No effort, no amount, no
explanation is adequate. Sethe gives her face to Beloved and still she demands more. Beloved
eventually becomes bloated with Sethe's loving excesses, but her thirst remains unquenched.
Paul D. understands the dangers inherent in this kind of love when he warns Sethe, "Your
love is too thick" (164). Beloved has no distinct identity separate from Sethe. Without Sethe,
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Beloved is ultimately left "crouching in a dark, dark place, forgetting to smile" (252).
Likewise, Sethe's own identity is nearly lost or completely surrendered in her fusion with
Beloved.
Though short of ultimate union or reunion with Beloved in death, Sethe is unable and
unwilling to challenge Beloved's place in her mind and in her home. Only help from others
can save her. Denver makes the first humble appeals for help on behalf of her mother. In
doing so, she begins to understand and appreciate the vital necessity of a concept of self,
influenced by but not completely dependent upon memory. Though Denver does not directly
impart this discovery to her mother Paul D. does when he tells her, "You your best thing,
Sethe. You are" (273). Ella provides the most vocal and coherent opposition to a life
dominated by the past. Her ideas seem to be built upon the foundation of Baby Suggs wisdom
which said, "We flesh… Love it. Love it hard", advocating a sensual existence grounded
firmly in the present (88). "Ella didn't like the idea of past errors taking possession of the
present...Daily life took as much as she had. The future was sunset; the past something to
leave behind...every day was a test and a trial" (256). In some ways, her thoughts seem to
echo Nietzsche's metaphor of the Eternal Return of the Same. As an ethical endeavour, he
challenges every individual to live each moment, each hour, each day, as though he or she
was doomed to repeat it for eternity. Memory represents an obstacle to such an existence. It is
both a barrier and bridge between individuals. By the conclusion of the novel, memories
dissipate and dissolve. They do not linger. The reader is left with a sense that some things
houses a great paradox: the ability to create a false sense of completeness, the ability to
provoke the most profound sense of loss. It is the paradox woven into the nature of memory
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which moves time forward. "The force behind the movement of time is a mourning that will
not be comforted."
Toni Morrison’s Beloved explores the many horrors of, as well as emotional and
physical damage incurred by, slavery. One of the most poignant and potentially devastating
mother-child relationships. Slavery turned children of slaves into property—property that was
not the slaves,’ but the masters;’ mothers could not nurse or raise their own children: a
provision to ensure they would not become attached to them; and the horrors of slavery
caused emotional disconnects that led to mothers mentally neglecting their children. This was
perhaps because mothers knew they would be losing their children sooner or later anyway.
Morrison explores the fact that slave mothers often were not allowed to raise or nurse their
own children, and shows the damage it does to the mother-child relationships. She illustrates
this with three episodes in the novel: (1) Sethe’s relationship with her own mother; (2) Baby
Suggs’ relationships with her children; and (3) the milk stealing scene. Each of these
Sethe did not get the chance to know her mother, and only encountered her one time
that she could recall; her mother pulled her aside to show her a branding under her breast, and
told her that if anything happened to her, Sethe could recognize her by that mark (72). When
her mother is hanged, Sethe recognizes her branding. According to Lynda Koolish, of San
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Diego State University, Sethe was deeply affected, not only by her lack of a relationship with
her mother, but also by her mother’s hanging. Slavery had so destroyed Sethe’s mother that
she chose to leave her only living child, presumably the only child she loved, to try to escape.
Nan tells Sethe that she was with her mother on the ship from Africa, and they were both
raped and impregnated several times by the crew. She explains, “’She threw them all away
but you. The one from the crew she threw away on the island. The others from more whites
she also threw away. Without names, she threw them. You she gave the name of the black
man. She put her arms around him. The others she did not put her arms around” (Morrison
74). So it is clear that Sethe was loved by her mother, but her mother still tried to leave her
behind.
Sethe would rather kill her children than subject them to the horrors of slavery once
she had escaped with them. She shows this when she tells Paul D, “I couldn’t let her nor any
of em live under schoolteacher. […] I took and put my babies where they’d be safe” (192-3).
Her mother, however, perhaps knew that if she tried to escape with Sethe and had been
captured, Sethe would have also been hanged. While Sethe tries to kill her children to save
them, her mother killed her other babies in order to challenge her sexual and economic
Contextual Praxis (12). Sethe does not see that her mother did not want to put her life even
more at risk by trying to escape with her. This forever shapes the way Sethe thinks of
motherhood and slavery. The fact that Sethe does not know her mother or understand her
motives affects her relationship with her own children in different ways: she hates that her
mother could not nurse her, so she places extreme importance on nursing her own children;
and she tries to be disconnected from her children for fear that she will lose all of them, as
While Sethe’s emotional disconnect with her children comes after she has been able
to “love em proper” (Morrison 190), Baby Suggs’ emotional disconnect with her children
starts immediately. According to Barzey, she “refused to let herself love children who could
be taken away from her” (14). Morrison clearly illustrates this when she explains why she
had prepared herself for Halle’s death. She had been prepared for that better than she had for
his life. The last of her children, whom she barely glanced at when he was born because it
wasn’t worth the trouble to try to learn features you would never see change into adulthood
anyway. Seven times she had done that: held a little foot; examined the fat fingertips with her
own—fingers she never saw become the male or female hands a mother would recognize
anywhere. She didn’t know to this day what their permanent teeth looked like; or how they
held their heads when they walked. Did Patty lose her lisp? What colour did Famous’ skin
finally take? Was that a cleft in Johnny’s chin or just a dimple that would disappear soon or
his jawbone changed? Four girls, and the last time she saw them there was no hair under their
arms. Does Ardelia still love the burned bottom of bread? All seven were gone or dead. What
would be the point of looking too hard at the youngest one? (163-5) Baby Suggs had lost all
of her children in one way or another, and her emotional block was a method of self-
preservation: if she did not know her children, she could not miss them when they were gone.
Moreover, the metaphorical reduction of slaves to livestock constructs the idea that
they are property to be bought and sold; slave children are a form of self-sustaining crop to
slave masters—theirs to be bought and sold, and not the mother’s to love and nurture.
According to Koolish, “While pregnancy thus creates for many women the illusion of an
undifferentiated and relatively unconflicted fusion between mother and child, slavery makes
impossible both in pregnancy and its aftermath, the ideal experience of mothering” (p.182).
Slavery, in its very essence, prohibits mothers from bonding with their children. This is
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because it is understood that they are property. When a slave mother kills one of her children,
the main charge against her is “loss of and/or damage to property” (p. 12). Sethe clearly
alludes to this when she says that “they [her children] wasn’t [sic] mine to love” (p. 190). In
fact, slaves, as well as slave children, were considered the same as work-animals to their
masters. This point is made explicitly clear when schoolteacher thinks that Sethe had “at least
ten breeding years left. But now she’d gone wild, due to the mishandling of the nephew
who’d overbeat her and made her cut and run. Schoolteacher had chastised that nephew,
telling him to think—just think—what would his own horse do if you beat it beyond the point
of education” (p. 176). Schoolteacher, and slave masters like him, did not regard slaves as
human, but instead believed that they were sub-human, with human-like and animal-like
qualities. This justified the horrible treatment slaves were forced to endure. Not only did the
horrible treatment leave physical scars, but also very deep emotional scars. This is especially
the case when Sethe’s milk is stolen. Since she was not only deprived of nursing from her
mother for more than the first few weeks of life, but she was also nursed last by Nan and left
hungry, Sethe understood the importance of breastfeeding for both mothers and children. She
said, “Nan had to nurse white babies and me too because Ma’am was in the rice. The little
white babies got it first and I got what was left. Or none. There was no nursing milk to call
my own. I know what it is to be without the milk that belongs to you; to have to fight and
holler for it, and to have so little left” (236). This was likely the reason Sethe was so
concerned about providing milk for her children. She knew how it felt to not have a mother to
love and provide for her. Her milk was all she had for her children, but she made sure they
had enough. As she imagines telling Beloved, Sethe thinks, “… only me had your milk, and
God do what He would, I was going to get it to you. You remember that, don’t you; that I
did? That when I got here I had milk enough for all?” (233).
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She desperately wanted Beloved to understand that, even though she was violated, she
“Sethe’s love for her children, her striving to nurture them, her desire to keep them safe is
symbolized by her ability to breastfeed them. The schoolteacher and his sons had held her
down and drank her breast milk. When she told Mrs. Garner what had happened, she was
beaten. Yet when she spoke of the incident, she was more angry about the fact that: “they had
stolen the milk intended for her child than the whipping that had left her with a back so
scarred she had no feeling in it. She had to get away from Sweet Home, not for herself, but so
that she could feed her baby daughter whom she had entrusted to another runaway slave.
(14)”
Sethe was so appalled that they dared to try to steal from her child, by stealing her
milk, that it was a far worse atrocity to steal her milk than to open her back for telling on
them. By stealing her milk, they had not only committed a crime against Sethe, but against
her child, too. They had attempted to take away the only thing Sethe could provide for her
children. But they could not steal the milk from her child, though they’d tried. Sethe says,
“[Beloved] She my daughter. The one I managed to have milk for and to get it to her even
after they stole it; after they handled me like I was the cow, no, the goat, back behind the
stable because it was too nasty to stay in with the horses” (p. 236-7). So, while the milk-
stealing had scarred Sethe emotionally much worse than her completely scarred back, in her
mind she still won since she still got the milk to her Beloved.
While slavery may have destroyed motherhood and mother-child relationships, it did
not succeed in destroying the love between slave mothers and their children. Sethe had such
love for her children that she couldn’t fathom them living the life she endured; death was
much kinder than slavery. Slavery could never destroy maternal love, but it forced mothers to
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make decisions no mother should have to make: showing your child how to identify your
lifeless body; forgetting all of their features to make their absence less painful; and ultimately
Theme of Home
From the opening line of the novel, “124 was spiteful,” a sense of place is established
as a key element. The main characters who reside in the house or have previously resided in
the house are directly affected by the haunted spirit of Sethe’s dead baby. While this gives
way to the power of spirits and the supernatural within the novel as a whole, it always gives
meaning to the house and what it stands for, particularly according to Sethe. Sethe refuses to
move out of the house for anything or anyone, including her daughter, Denver. In addition to
giving stubborn responses to Paul D, her daughter and Baby Suggs when they inquire about
moving to a different house, the narrator gives us a glimpse into Sethe’s head by utilizing
third person limited point of view. The narrator describes, “This house he told her to leave as
though a house was a little thing-a shirtwaist or a sewing basket you could walk off from or
give away any old time. She who had never had but this one; she who had to bring a fistful of
salsify into Mrs. Garner’s kitchen every day just to be able to work in it, feel like some part
of it was hers…” (27). For her, this house, the only one she has ever been able to call her
own, is a symbolism of her pride, her only connection to her dead baby and a remembrance
of the hardships she endured to make it out of slavery and into the real world of being able to
Because Toni Morrison explores the lives of women in all her novels, most critics read her
works as mainly woman-centered, while most studies of her male characters present the men and
their stories as secondary to that of the women characters. However, Morrison also explores the
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constructions of masculinities as complicated by race and history in her works. Through her male
characters’ lives in Beloved, Morrison demonstrates the complexities and paradoxes inherent in the
making of black masculinities and the oppression and denial of selfhood they experience in a slave-
owning era. She thus tells the stories of black male characters and invests them with voice and
visibility. To clearly bring out the realities of being black, male and subordinated, she contrasts black
masculinities with the dominant white hegemonic masculinity practices that restrict and negatively
define black men. Using the lives of selected black and white male characters in Beloved, this paper
examines the manifestations of white hegemonic masculinities in the white characters’ lives and their
impact on black men. It also analyses the creation and operations of black or subordinated
masculinities within the oppressive and often horrific circumstances in which black men find
themselves.
The depiction of the struggling male figure in Toni Morrison’s Beloved is faint in comparison
to female community and characters in the novel, but it is the lack thereof that represents the idea of
the hidden masculine in society. There are a few recurring ideas that hinder males in a way that
accents their gender stress and follow studies of masculinity. By marginalizing men and illustrating
Paul D’s anxiety and Halle’s breakdown, Morrison critiques and sheds light on the hidden pressures
and expectations placed on men by society and the female community through history as it began
with slavery. First, the males express to hide their feelings and practice “thin” love, this aligns with
their lifestyle bound in slavery as they fight to find work and assimilate afterwards. Black male
slaves are also stipend power based on the ‘hospitality’ or radicalness of their masters. While some
masters wield their slaves as weapons of empowerment, an occasional white man will be as civil as
The black males of Beloved: Paul D, Halle, the rest of the Sweet Home men, and Stamp Paid,
approach their masculinity in ways that emphasize their strength and standing in society through
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images, metaphors, and also by accentuating their experiences as a slave in ways that are not
experienced in the same way by female slaves. For instance, their experience of punishment by their
white masters, While their images can be interpreted as phallic, haunting, or animalistic that
accentuate their masculinity, their interpretations also show the oppressions they experience that
Paul D is one of the major male characters in Beloved, but his story goes mostly unheard and
unstressed, as does his identity as character. His actions throughout the novel are quite judgmental,
yet protective of Sethe’s parenting skills and wellbeing as a lover, but he still cannot understand her
attachment and reasoning towards Beloved, as do many other characters. If readers are to understand
Sethe’s fierce maternal love, Paul D’s meditation on the anxieties and pressures of manhood, a
system that keeps men from that love, must be analysed as a counterbalance. Paul D practices
careful, “thin” love just as some masculine theories do not associate strong masculine figures as
compassionate or adoring because it would contradict their outward appearance and ‘their capability
to be a man.’ He fulfils his masculine role here as he defies love and appearing weak because of it as
From the start of the novel the slaves of Sweet Home are called “men” by their ‘radical’
owner Mr. Garner, “bought…thataway, raised…thataway” (p. 10). Calling a slave ‘man,’ instead of
‘boy’ insinuates a form of respect and empowerment that can be dangerous. Masculinity is accented
by the words and labels associated with it to separate the Sweet Home men from the rest of the slave
community. In the words of Garner, “if you a man yourself, you’ll want your niggers to be men too”
(p. 10). By classifying himself as a powerful, brave man amongst powerful, ‘animalistic’ male slaves
he controls, Mr. Garner demonstrates his fearlessness as slave owner, but he also increases the value
and power of the men he owns. The Sweet Home men are not the common nineteenth century
propaganda slaves that are typically portrayed as “lazy, childlike, docile, or [even] happy in the role
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of the servant” (Morris 77). Instead, they are thriving, hungry black brutes— a separate entity from
the withered ‘boy’ in slavery, something to respect and fear. By dominating and controlling
something as powerful as him, Mr. Garner elevates the competition among other slave owners while
demonstrating the masculinity of himself and the slaves he controls. He appears more ‘civil’ to his
slaves, his decent treatment keeps his slaves from running. Though Sweet Home poses as a haven,
the context of slavery still soils Mr. Garner’s ‘generosity’ because he still possesses ownership over
others.
Morrison first introduces Paul D and his strength as a man when he first walks into “spiteful”
124 (p. 3). He quickly assumes the role of protector and defender in order to cast out the evil and
uneasiness tormenting Sethe and Denver— the damsels in distress. Even Sethe expects she can “trust
things and remember things [just from Paul D’s presence] because the last of the Sweet Home men
was there to catch her if she sank” (p. 18). Paul D ignites the memories, strength, and bonds of Sweet
Home that Sethe was once a part of. Swinging a wooden table and screaming at the house, “You
want to fight, come on! God damn it!” (p. 18). He demonstrates his dominance and anger, proving he
is still a man that fights despite his years as a slave and surviving in a system that is formulated by
removing fight and vigour. Perhaps he is stronger because he was constantly in danger, always
threatened, or maybe he is fulfilling the stereotype of the violent, belligerent black male because he
cannot help it— years of conforming has damaged his identity as a human being.
Paul D’s strength as a man is undeniable until he demonstrates signs of doubt and loneliness.
He recalls that he “had not trembled since 1856 and then for eighty-three days in a row. Locked up
and chained down…” until he faces the evil in 124 only to realize that he was “not shaking from
worry, but because the floorboards were…” (p. 18). This shows that Paul D unintentionally and
subconsciously connects his traumatic past to current experiences without remedying them or
initially understanding them. Cultural critic Todd W. Reeser indicates that “hiding can allow
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masculinity to function without challenge or question” as fear and confusion are masked a sturdy
outward appearance remains (Reeser 7). Paul D keeps his past secret from Sethe until she finds out
the truth about Halle. While he keeps his past concealed he remains a trustworthy and durable male
figure in Sethe’s eyes until he is forced to explain Halle’s own suffering and ultimately reveal her
husband’s weakness.
Unlike Paul D, however, Sethe openly grieves and her sorrow grows and personifies in 124.
Perhaps this is because she is a woman or she has stronger connections with the house and her past.
Sethe is completely ignorant to the possibility that men can feel fear or she holds too much faith in
men to not show weakness. Paul D explains to her, “Let me tell you something. A man ain’t a
goddamn ax. Chopping, hacking, busting every goddamn minute of the day. Things get to him.
Things he can’t chop down because they’re inside” (p. 69). His definition of a man incorporates
social triggers in which the male is a tool of fragile violence and fury, a tool of work and
enslavement, but also defence. While the man, the ax, is available to be utilized, women may rely on
the tool for support and backing. If they rely too heavily on the tool, it can become a hindrance or
eventually break. Hoping 124 will not break him, Paul D swings and hacks at an unknown evil in
which his thrashing and screaming shows the exploitation of his masculinity. While he performs his
masculinity, his exaggeration appears senseless and fearful. With this explanation of the ax, Paul D
acknowledges and reveals the weakness of men in general to Sethe. In doing so, he also creates
eventual doubt in Sethe’s feelings and trust in him with Beloved’s intrusion.
There is a moment in Paul D’s past where his masculinity is completely removed. Eventually
Paul D is sold to a chain gang where he sleeps in a box at night and works all day chained to 46 other
slaves. This community of male slaves forms a quiet brotherhood with unnoticeable cues and words
that band them together. They do not hold each other to specific roles to fill as a masculine
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community would, they are not afraid to show emotion because all 46 are feeling the same thing with
good reason, and when these individuals link every morning they move and work as one.
“When all fort-six were standing in a line in the trench, another rifle shot signalled the climb
out and up to the ground above, where one thousand feet of the best hand-forged chain in Georgia
stretched. Each man bent and waited. The first man picked up the end and threaded it through the
loop on his leg iron. He stood up then, and, shuffling a little, brought the chain tip to the next
prisoner, who did likewise. As the chain was passed on and each man stood in the other’s place, the
line of men turned around, facing the boxes they had come out of. No one spoke to the other. At least
not with words. The eyes had to tell what there was to tell: ‘Help me this morning’s bad’; ‘I’m a
Morrison simultaneously captures the individual male surviving without outside concerns
such as women, old masters, etc., but also relying on a group of individuals with mutual
understanding and respect. This interesting dynamic renders the men helpless on their own, but they
find comfort in each other. They are not loving “thick” or “thin” as they would in society, they are
being human: living by each other’s strength and endangering each other in return. “A man could
risk his own life, but not his brother’s” (p. 109). The masculinity encased in slavery provides a new
medium to paint humanity while also stressing its horrors. Paul D is able to come to terms with his
past, but he still continues to doubt the fundamental aspects of his identity, the source of his
manhood, and his value as a person, which can be accredited to his gender strains and emasculation
NARRATIVE EMPATHY
Empathy
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that are thought of as being central for constituting humans as social creatures allowing us to
know what other people are thinking and feeling, to emotionally engage with them, to share
their thoughts and feelings, and to care for their well–being. Ever since the eighteenth
century, due particularly to the influence of the writings of David Hume and Adam Smith,
those capacities have been at the centre of scholarly investigations into the underlying
psychological basis of our social and moral nature. Yet, the concept of empathy is of
have focused their investigations on very specific aspects of the broad range of empathy-
related phenomena, one should probably not be surprised by a certain amount of conceptual
confusion and a multiplicity of definitions associated with the empathy concept in a number
Empathy in Literature
In The Passionate Muse, Keith Oatley provided an insightful account of the role of
characters act on their intentions and encounter vicissitudes. Readers enjoy entering into the
lives of characters, following their projects, and coming to empathize with them as their
plans progress or meet obstacles. Readers enjoy, too, meeting characters with whom they
Another description offers two modes of empathy based on physiological mimicry and verbal
analogy. A third mode of empathy called embodied simulation, is best understood using
Chris Eliasmith’s idea of semantic pointers, which are patterns of neural firing that can
represent sensory, motor, and emotional information. They can support rules such as
“insulted” , “hurt”, where the words in quotations indicate semantic pointers using non-verbal
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representations. For example, “insult” can include the tone of voice, facial expression, and
obnoxious gesture that goes with an abusive remark; and “hurt” is the felt emotional
your own mind the rule so that you can appreciate more directly how being insulted, for
instance, is hurtful.
related to sympathy or compassion, and the two are commonly used in relation to each other.
In Empathy and The Novel, Keen “distinguishes the spontaneous, responsive sharing of an
appropriate feeling as empathy, and the more complex, differentiated feeling for another as
sympathy”. One can use Keen’s definition of the terms, and treat empathy as the ability to put
oneself in another’s place and fully manage to understand their situation. Empathy in itself is
morally neutral whereas sympathy is not. For Patrick Colm Hogan “to empathize with
someone is to put oneself in his/her place, and that substitution presupposes something that is
shared”. Hogan distinguishes two separate ways in which this sharing can occur. The first he
calls categorical empathy, which is empathy based on the empathizer and sufferer sharing a
categorical trait – for instance gender, race, nationality, ethnicity, age and so on. This is the
weaker kind of empathy, rarely leading to compassion because it is group-related and not
based on individual mapping of feelings (Keen; Empathy and the Novel). The other is
situational empathy, which occurs when the reader has a memory of a similar situation or
feeling to that of the sufferer. Following Hogan, situational empathy is the form of empathy
that more likely leads to sympathetic or empathetic concern, because of its reliance on “a
reader having a memory of comparable experience” (Keen Empathy and the Novel). As
Hogan points out, the emotional response that empathy leads to is often triggered by how we
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place ourselves in relation to the one we empathize with. If the reader considers herself
inferior to the character, this may lead to idolization. If she values herself and the character as
response requires an “it could have been me” feeling within the reader. Third, if the reader
values the character as inferior to herself the emotional response will most likely be of pity
difficult empathy from easy empathy. Eric Leake points out the developmental effect of
difficult empathy in literature and the distinction from easy empathy: Whereas an easy
empathy does not require much of a stretch and can suggest a complete grasp, a difficult
empathy pushes the limits of our understanding in reaching out to those with whom we might
and humanities, who has “stressed the value of novel reading for the cultivation of empathy”
(Hogan; Affective Narratology: The Emotional Structure of Stories). She has presented grand
works on emotional studies and found the concept of narrative imagination very important in
the cultivation of world citizenship. Her approach is mainly philosophical, but is also
studying controversial literary works, is one of three essential abilities one must have in order
to become an open-minded world citizen: First, is the capacity to be critical towards oneself
and one’s traditions. The second is the ability to see human beings as a whole and not as
separate groups; understanding how “common needs and aims are differently realized in five
different circumstances” (Nussbaum 10). The third capacity is the narrative imagination,
which is the one central to this thesis. Narrative imagination is the ability to imagine what it
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is like to be in a person’s place, even if that person is very different from oneself. This
capacity, Nussbaum argues, is best acquired through fiction: The first step of understanding
the world from the point of view of the other is essential to any responsible act or judgement,
since we do not know what we are judging until we see the meaning of an action as the
person intends it, the meaning of speech as it expresses something of importance in the
context of that person’s history and social world. The capacity to understand and reflect upon
perspectives different than those we already inhabit can be rehearsed through fiction.
Through literature the reader has the opportunity to investigate thoughts and feelings of
another, and also to be critical of those thoughts and feelings. Allowing oneself to mentally
be in the position of a character in fiction is less challenging for a reader than to do the same
with a person one has just met on the street. Nussbaum believes that this opportunity to “look
inside” the character’s mind also allows the reader to take a necessary step back. With this
she means to reflect upon “whether the person’s own judgement has taken the full measure of
what has happened”. This step back contributes to a better understanding of individuals who
appear to be different from us. Furthermore, she claims that narrative imagination teaches us
to become more reflective human beings in real life. In order for readers to develop this
imaginative ability, she emphasises that “we must encourage them to read critically; not only
to empathize and experience, but also to ask critical questions about that experience.” To
accomplish this, she argues, one must read novels that problematise empathy for characters.
Nussbaum explains, “if we can easily sympathise with a character, the invitation to do so has
relatively little moral value”. Only when forced to leave the comfort zone of what is morally
accepted can one develop an open-minded world citizenship. This is also why she believes
that it is important to teach literature that “challenges conventional wisdom and values”. The
novel Native Son by Richard Wright is one of Nussbaum’s most frequent examples of
with the young African American protagonist “who kills his lover Bessie more casually than
he kills a rat” is extremely difficult. The dissonance between the alternating perspectives of
newspaper articles and the narrated monologues of Bigger Thomas makes it even more
challenging for the reader to empathise. Similar dissonance emerges in Beloved where Toni
Morrison challenges the reader to look past the brutal portrayals of Sethe killing her own
baby girl and try to empathise with Sethe as she portrays herself as an advocate of freedom.
But at the same time, Morrison prevents this empathy from fully taking place by repeating the
event through the critical perspectives of other characters. Suzanne Keen critiques Nussbaum
and other theorists in favour of the empathy altruism theory, claiming that findings on the
altruistic effect of narrative empathy are “inconclusive at best and nearly always exaggerated
Suzanne Keen “has studied recent writings on emotion more broadly and deeply” than
Nussbaum has (Hogan; Affective Narratology: The Emotional Structure of Stories). Her
interdisciplinary work takes a critical approach to the connection between narrative empathy
and altruistic behaviour. One of her main arguments is that fiction provides a safe place for
readers, allowing us to distance ourselves from our moral beliefs and values. Therefore, we
can empathise with fiction without feeling any need for altruistic action in real life (Empathy
and the Novel). Much of Keen’s work concerns investigating research and theories on
specific narrative techniques that can be effective in invoking reader’s empathy. Her work is
based on findings from a diversity of research on the emotional effects of reading. She
separates two main areas in which cultivation of reader’s empathy occurs, through character
identification and narrative situation (including point of view and perspective). Character
identification is not a manipulative technique that an author can use to cultivate empathy, but
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happens within the reader herself. However, the author can attempt to manipulate empathy
through the narrative situation, which includes: the nature of the mediation between the
author and the reader, including the person of the narration, the implicit location of the
narrator, the relation of the narrator to the characters, and the internal and external
consciousness (Keen; Empathy and the Novel). Morrison employs complex narrative voices
and perspectives in her works, as much to problematise empathy as to invoke it. In Narrative
Form, Keen points out that “the manipulation of a narrative situation is one of the most useful
strategies possessed by fiction writers to elicit sympathy, to command respect, and to unleash
the complicated effects that go by the name of irony”. The choice of narrative perspective can
internal perspective best promotes character identification” (Keen; Empathy and the Novel).
Tense, the use of analepses, and characterisations are all amongst narrative techniques that
may influence how the reader emotionally responds to a character. The way internal
representations of characters are presented through third-person narratives might also affect
how the reader responds to the characters. Wayne Booth claims, “a psychic vividness of
prolonged and deep inside views” can help an author achieve “intense sympathy” for a
character who would not otherwise get sympathy easily from the reader. Furthermore,
theorists have found that representation of characters’ thoughts through “narrated monologue
has a strong effect on readers’ responses” (Keen; Empathy and the Novel). In narrated
monologue the character’s thoughts are presented within the tense and perspective of the
narrator. We see examples of narrated monologues in Toni Morrison’s work where these
multiple internal perspectives affect the reader’s emotions towards the protagonists.
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of her unique portrayals of the shameful history of slavery, abuse and segregation in America.
Through her novels, she gives voice to the silenced history of African Americans.
In Morrison’s novels the reader must always pay attention to whose perspective she
is introduced to, and further reflect upon how this perspective complicates her emotions. This
is significant to our empathetic response to her work because the presence of multiple
perspectives becomes such an important part of the ethical judgement of her protagonists. Her
works portray how nuances of perspectives, subjectivity of truth and the limitations of
empathy problematize our emotional responses as readers. There are three main techniques
through which the narrative situation is manipulated to problematize and challenge the
First, the narrative situation in terms of narrative voice, perspective and disordering of
events manipulates how the reader responds to the plot. In particular, the monologues
accruing at the mid-section of the novel (236-256) are powerful ethical devices. These
alternating narrative perspectives also illustrate the multiplicity of truth, and challenge the
reader’s own version of it. Second, by completely isolating major characters (especially
protagonist Sethe and her daughter Denver), Morrison distances her readers from them. From
this section it can be discerned that isolating individual characters from each other provides a
distance from the protagonist that makes empathetic response challenging for the reader.
Third, the extremity of the events portrayed causes narrative distancing between the whole
narrative and the reader. Morrison alternates familiarity and unfamiliarity in an unpredictable
way. This might cause the reader to question the limits of empathy and problematise the
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emotion of pity. What are the limitations of what we can imagine? Can the extremity of
Sethe’s experiences lead to anything other than pity or personal distress for the reader?
Beloved has had a tremendous impact on the field of African American literature and is
considered an important part of the literary canon. The work is written through several
individual memories of Sethe’s deed the day the Schoolteacher (slave-owner) and his men
approach Sethe’s home to reclaim her and the children as his “property.” Sethe collects her
four children and runs to the shed to save them from slavery. In the shed she attempts to kill
all of them. She severely hurts her two boys and her baby girl, Denver, and manages to kill
Beloved, her “crawling already” infant, with a handsaw. We are invited into their “spiteful”
house called 124 in 1873, years after the infanticide took place, when “Sethe and her
daughter Denver are its only victims” because everybody else has either run off or died
(Morrison; Beloved 3). The baby ghost of Beloved haunts the house. When Sethe and Paul D
begin to share the painful stories of their mutual past as slaves at the plantation called Sweet
Home, Beloved returns to 124 in physical form, possibly as a symbol of suppressed memory
of the past. Multiple portrayals of Sethe using a handsaw to slice her daughter’s throat, make
the reader unable to take a clear ethical stand about this infanticide and question whether or
not she can empathise with Sethe. Morrison manipulates the narration by alternating internal
and external perceptions of multiple characters, carefully choosing which memory to present
at which time. The structure gives an oral effect to the narrative as new perspectives are
portrayed, and the ability to empathize with Sethe becomes more and more problematic for
the reader throughout the novel. One powerful perspective after another makes the ethical
dilemma large, and the reader must always pay attention to whose eyes she sees through.
Throughout the novel we are presented with a fragmented structure that keeps the
reader at a distance from the narrative. The plot jumps between past and present as we follow
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Sethe’s analepses side by side with those of Paul D, Baby Suggs (Sethe’s mother-in-law),
Stamp Paid and Denver. Even though they portray many of the same events, their memories
do not come together into a tidy wholeness. Molly A. Travis claims, “the full ethical force of
Beloved’s design derives from this side-by-side relationship between stories that do not
coalesce or resolve themselves into harmony” (Travis 237). It is important for Morrison to
tell their perspectives of a shared past separately and equally. This illustrates how these
perspectives differ, and also makes a difference to the reader’s perception of Sethe and the
infanticide. The different portrayals of the traumatic time at Sweet Home, particularly those
of Paul D and Sethe, show the reader how individual memory is. Morrison gives the reader
hints about the infanticide through these memories as well, but it is not until Stamp Paid
shows Paul D a notice in the newspaper that the reader understands that the mystery is about
to be revealed. The first revelation of Sethe’s infanticide is portrayed through the perspective
of the slave owners at Sweet Home. As Schoolteacher and his men approach the shed, the
reader sees the event through the eyes of the man who values Sethe as property that
reproduces itself. The vision is described through the perspective of a cold antagonist who
sees Sethe as an animal “beat beyond the point of education” (p. 176).
“Inside, two boys bled in the sawdust and dirt at the feet of a nigger woman holding a blood-
soaked child to her chest with one hand and an infant by the heels in the other. She did not
look at them; she simply swung the baby towards the wall planks… Right off it was clear, to
schoolteachers especially, that there was nothing there to claim… Two were lying open-eyed
in the sawdust; a third pumped blood down the dress of the main one.”
As James Phelan argues, the slave catchers’ view of the incident in the shed appears
insensitive and alien, which makes this first telling of the event “an ethical perspective that
[the reader] easily can repudiate”. However, the portrayal of the incident in itself is gruesome
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and harsh, and the prior image of Sethe as merely a victim of slavery vanishes for the reader.
It becomes clear that Sethe and her family are just broken property that cannot be fixed, to
these men. After this insensitive and raw portrayal, Morrison moves to the perspective of
Stamp Paid.
Since Stamp Paid portrays the first emotional perspective of the event, this can make
him the most dominating agent of ethics in the novel. Through the previous indirect
characterization of Stamp Paid, the reader learns to know him as the man who saves Sethe
and her baby-Denver from death and starvation when they first arrive from Sweet Home. He
is a compassionate and righteous man. Stamp Paid is a man who walks through painful
obstacles just to collect the best blackberries for the women in Sweet Home, only to give
Denver the first taste of the delicious berries (p.160). The characterization of him alongside
his focalization of the infanticide leaves an important impression on the reader. Stamp Paid’s
perspective appears more emotionally loaded to the reader because of his relation to Sethe.
His memory of the day the infanticide took place however, portrays Sethe’s deed as the one
of a scared animal. This positions her as inferior to him as well, but as Phelan emphasizes;
“he does not reduce her to” an animal, though he does compare her actions to those of one:
Snatching up her children like a hawk on the wing; how her face beaked, how her hands
worked like claws, how she collected them every which way… A pretty little slave girl had
recognized a hat, and split to the woodshed to kill her children. (p.185-186) From Stamp
Paid’s point of view, Sethe goes from being “a pretty little slave girl” to being a predator to
her children. The animalistic behaviour is also what the reader first emotionally responds to.
Stamp Paid’s emotions towards her are those of pity, not of sympathy. Therefore, Sethe
becomes an inferior to the reader as well and a target of pity. Pity is an emotion directed
towards an inferior person, and Morrison lets her implied reader become conscious of this
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emotion created through the eyes of Stamp Paid. “To respond with compassion, [the reader]
must be willing to entertain the thought that the suffering person might be [her]”. If the reader
places herself above the character she will not be able to respond with compassion, but rather
with pity. This is what the reader is most likely to do because of the inferior portrayal of
Sethe: first innocent as a “ pretty little slave girl” and then fierce like a “hawk.” As Hogan
states, “we may have still greater pity if we imagine [Sethe] to lack the capacities to act
appropriately in response to the fear and the [moral] principles” (What Literature Teaches us
about Emotions; 280). Stamp Paid’s emotions towards Sethe seem to be those of “greater
pity.” In his eyes Sethe loses the capacity to think straight and act morally because of her fear
of enslavement. The narrator then moves over to Sethe’s own explanation. For the reader this
is the version that finally will “provide some resolution to the tension” Morrison has built up
through earlier “partial, indirect and cryptic references” to the infanticide (Phelan 323). As
Paul D protests several times when looking at the newspaper: “But this ain’t her mouth…
This ain’t it at all,” and he is absolutely right, the story is not the one of Sethe, but the one of
the society around her (p. 184). The perspective the reader craves is Sethe’s own “mouth.”
The only problem is that Sethe can “never close in, pin it down for anybody who [has] to
ask” (p. 192). Therefore, Morrison leaves out the emotional description from Sethe of what
exactly happened in the shed. By placing her reader in the difficult situation of not being led
in any certain ethical direction by the narrator, Morrison distances her reader from the
incident itself. While the reader in some ways is driven to look for reasons to forgive Sethe’s
deed through the previous sympathetic portrayals of her traumatic past, she is kept from
doing this by the characters who either condemn Sethe or distance themselves from her
actions. As Phelan points out, moving from the white men’s to Stamp Paid’s to Sethe’s
be inclined to conclude that Morrison is guiding us toward accepting Sethe’s version. But the
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triangulation of all three stories indicates that Morrison does not want Sethe’s story to be the
authoritative version because that triangulation calls attention to what Sethe leaves out of her
account: the handsaw, the slit throat, the blood, the swinging of the baby toward the wall.
Sethe’s own perception of the death of Beloved is quite different from what is portrayed by
the others. She is no longer a trapped animal, but a fighter for justice, which makes her
perspective more sympathetic. Stamp Paid believes that ”in her own mind she is acting as the
altruistic mother, “trying to out-hurt the hurter”. Sethe claims to Paul D that she made the
only right choice that day. She kept the children from death by enslavement, which is a
powerful claim that would impose sympathetic response. The problem is, as Phelan points
out, that she leaves out the horror that the other portrayals call attention to. This, together
with Sethe’s later comment to Beloved, “they stopped me from getting us there, but they
didn't stop you from getting here. Haha '' makes it difficult to sympathize with her because of
the brutality of the deed itself (Morrison; Beloved 239). Her perspective causes the implied
reader to feel, as the people watching her step into the cart to prison, that “her head is a bit
too high” and “her back a little too straight” for a mother who has murdered her own baby
girl (p.179).
In the interior monologues of Sethe, Denver and Beloved at the very end of the second part of
the novel, Morrison grants them their own free space to share their versions of the truth.
Travis calls this shift in structure “emblematic of the ethical power of the novel,” because of
how their voices are put in “counterpoint” to each other, to symbolize the multiplicity of
ethics and truth (Travis 237). When Sethe discovers that Beloved is her returned daughter,
she is determined to make Beloved understand her choice of killing her and explains “how if
she hadn’t killed her she would have died and that is something [Sethe] could not bear to
happen to her” (p.236). Being free from slavery makes her a person, entitled to love her own
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children because they are hers to love. Going back to slavery turns her and the children into
the “property” the schoolteacher describes. Lifeless “things” or “dogs” with nothing of their
own to love. Therefore, her definition of dying is the loss of safety and freedom at Sweet
Home. She will not let her children go back to the hell she fought so hard to save them from,
and killing them means saving them from that hell. Sethe becomes an active agent of freedom
in her own eyes. Through Sethe’s reasoning of the infanticide, Morrison also reminds her
reader of the limitations of our empathy. When reflecting upon Paul D’s disapproval of her
choice, Sethe again refers back to the abusive life of enslavement: “I have felt what it felt like
and nobody walking or stretched out is going to make you feel it too. Not you, not none of
mine, and when I tell you mine, I also mean I’m yours” (p. 239). It is difficult to follow Sethe
in her reasoning because of how brutally she kills Beloved when all she wants is to keep her
safe. The reader, understanding that she cannot identify with Sethe’s reasoning, “also
notice[s] differences in the inner world, seeing the delicate interplay between common human
goals and the foreignness that can be created by circumstances' ' (Nussbaum 95). In Sethe’s
monologue even the reader with the categorical connection of motherhood falls short of
identification. Loving motherhood and infanticide do not fit together, so the reader “is not
going to feel,” like Sethe. Sethe’s reasoning is based on a history of oppression, which the
reader realizes that she cannot empathize with. From Sethe, the narrative voice moves over to
Denver’s monologue, which in isolation has empathetic impact on the reader. Denver’s story
is the one that invokes the most sympathy within the reader. Her voice is pure and innocent
and it also contains the most consistent structure. She is hopeful of her father’s return. She
longs for a sister to love. She has a genuine fear of being killed by her mother (p. 242). Loss
of a close relative, love for a sibling, and fear of death are all traits that imply fundamentals
for situational empathy. Keen writes that “a character’s negative affective states, such as
obstacles, make a reader’s empathizing more likely” (Empathy and the Novel; 71). Denver as
merely a victim is easier to empathize with for the reader. It is no coincidence that Denver is
“what it took [Sethe] to drag the teeth of that saw under the little chin; to feel the baby blood
pump like oil in her hands…to squeeze her so she could absorb, still, the death spasms that
shot through that adored baby, plump and sweet with life” (Morrison; Beloved 295). This is
probably the most emotional passage of the novel, full of compassion. For a minute the
implied reader is led to feel that Sethe addresses the reader herself, until Morrison reminds
her, “this and much more had Denver heard her say [to Beloved]” (p. 296). Still, Morrison
has not given a direct perspective from Sethe on the murder, and even though the reader
sympathises with Denver’s retelling, it is not Sethe’s own “voice” this time either. Sethe is
only capable of telling the truth to Beloved, because she believes Beloved already has
forgiven her and can understand her. Sethe says, “I’ll explain to her, even though I don´t have
to…She understands everything already” (p. 237). This indicates that Sethe can only explain
to somebody who has already forgiven her and Beloved is the only one in the position to do
so. The three sections, ending with Beloved’s stream of consciousness, demonstrate how
ethical power lays within the equality of the perspectives, which do not fit or make up one
whole (Travis 237). “Beloved, she my daughter” (Morrison; Beloved 237), “Beloved is my
sister” and “I am Beloved, and she is mine” are the first sentences of each of their “chapters”
and show the women’s equal rights to ownership of their stories (242, 248, 253). The lines
ending this narrative structure: “I loved you/You hurt me/ You came back to me/You left me/
I waited for you”(256) illustrate how they contradict each other. Finally, the echoes of voices,
which we cannot identify, “you are mine / You are mine /You are mine” crash into each
other. The reader feels like the characters speak directly to her, demanding her attention and
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demanding sympathy. But what the voices are saying does not provide a complete true
answer to the reader’s moral questions. The inconsistency in this narrative situation is a
powerful empathetic device and in its multiplicity it works against the claims of easy
Sadism in Beloved
American women’s literature and photography that references Southern slavery. The sadistic
discourse of enslavement flowed into notions of femininity in the antebellum South. A loud
cry for the Confederacy during the war was to protect and preserve the sanctity of Southern,
white womanhood. But the apparent, and heavily inscribed fault-line between the
iconography of white femininity and the forced placement of the African American woman
as the antithesis to white womanhood- in the sense that the nineteenth century cult of true
womanhood emphasized an idea of sexual purity from which it consciously excluded non-
Caucasian women- must be kept in mind while theorising depictions of violence against
In the nineteenth-century South, under the laws of slavery, it was considered legally
impossible for a white man to rape a black woman: the law argued an enslaved woman could
not be raped because she could not be chaste, categorically, even if she was not yet a woman
but only a little girl. Focusing solely on the vicious racism evident in this indifference in the
history of cultural interpretations of white, African American, and Native American women,
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however, can leave under-theorised ways that these cultural inscriptions of womanhood,
distinct in concept and in act, could and did merge in violent inscription onto the bodies of
feminine subjects of all races. That is, the gendered sadism concocted in the South to forward
the goals of racism could also be turned against the bodies of white daughters, as habits are
wot to repeat themselves in the acts of oppressors. The fictional, poetic, and photographic
works addressed in this study record and reflect this reality of sadism as a tool coined in
The depiction of white women’s violence against African American women does not
surface in the specific texts, even though historically this form of violence frequently
occurred. However, the intention here does not stem from a lack of concern for the ways that
women violate each other. On the contrary, the focus is to fully consider the dynamics of how
women watch other women’s violation by focusing on texts in which both violated and
watcher are pf the same race and class. By controlling the variables of race and class, I allow
my study to emphasise the function of gender in violence, rather than the particular kind of
racist othering.
For instance, Beloved, stages key scenes in which the figure of a feminine watcher
who is African American views, or hears about, the sadistic treatment of another African
American character. Here, the difference is between being the watcher and being the
watched; it is not a difference between races and not a difference between social classes. To
fully read Beloved, one needs to theorise the difficult borderlands in which the watcher in the
novel Sethe, as martytos, bears suffering in the sense of representing suffering’s inscription
onto her body and mind. Whilst tracking imaginative landscapes of violence and witnessing,
of the risk of the watcher surfaces when Sethe kills her own daughter, destroying the girl she
calls her “best thing.” Through her role as watcher of sadism, Sethe also wounds herself- and
the novel makes it clear that Sethe’s role is scopic, wounding, and salvific. In this regard, it is
worth bearing in mind that if we, as audiences, are not denoted watchers of these scenes of
violence, we are connoted watchers: we inhabit the ethical prism of the text. As Kali Tal
argues in her introduction to Worlds of Hurt, readers may themselves be re-inscribed when
they read texts depicting trauma. In the verbal and visual texts under consideration in this
book, there are at least two audiences: an audience written or imaged in the text, and an
audience perceiving the text after the fact, from the outside that yet is never entirely outside,
looped into the performative act of a literary or photographic text. When Sethe, the enslaved
mother, kills her daughter, the mother’s act of violence is a performative gesture intended to
visually ward off the sadistic slave master who has arrived to claim his quarry. The audience-
Theories of sadistic violence have tended to create a gender divide: the feminine falls
into the place of the violated and masculinity into that of the violator. A different approach
here would be to interrogate the very complicated ethical position of women who watch the
character regards another, violated, feminine character. The watcher may or may not attempt
to help that violated woman; the definitive mark here is the representation of the feminine
Sadism in this context diverges from Freudian notions of sexual pleasure through
sadomasochism. It refers, here, to the speculative, visual aspect of acts of cruelty that are
inflicted on the helpless body of a non-agreeing other. The world sadism here is a violence
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inflicted onto the body of a person who cannot meaningfully defend herself or refuse the act
of violence enacted against her- violence that is a vehicle of visuality, performed for the
pleasure of the sadist’s eye. Moreover, the emphasis is on the spectative force of sadism, such
as bearing down on the question of how. Sadism connects to the witnessing and/or
spectatorship of violence. Ultimately it can be said that the distance between witnessing,
watching and enjoying violence is a fine line and one that ought not to be obscured by the
ideological supposition that women do not enjoy watching other women be violated. In some
cases, the feminine watchers of violence are created as figures who work against the
replication of violence, and in other cases, there are female figures who act as an audience to
the violence: a watcher who takes pleasure in watching another woman’s violation. Morrison
initiates her Beloved with an inscription dedicated to the “sixty million and more” victimised
in the era of American Slavery.” It is a novel positioned in the act of witnessing: written to
witness and to be witnessed, a gesture not without controversy. Carrie Mae Weems’ series
From Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried is a series built in part of re-photographs of
confluence of fiction and reality in the realm of the witness, whose act of bearing witness
resembles what, in Beloved is called “rememory.” On looking at From Here I Saw What
Happened and I Cried the witness enters the uncanny, liminal space between genres, a
liminal space also reflected in Morrison’s dedication for Beloved- for Morrison references
real, historical, kidnapped Africans and enslaved African Americans, in sharp juxtaposition
to a novel that is a magical re-working of historical material, a mode of both magic realism
femininity that creates itself as feminine by representing watching violence without flinching.
A story of feminine witnessing watches sadism in the performative sense but does not posit a
female actor of sadistic violence. Deborah Horvitz argues, in avowedly essentializing terms,
“women feel and express rage… and the difference lies in the link, for the men between
Through the subjective minds of the characters, the reader learns to know them as
individuals and not as a suppressed group of runaway slaves. This is important for cultivation
of reader’s empathy because, as the results of the social study “identifiable victim effect” by
Thomas Schelling show, people in general are more willing to help and empathise with
individuals than with groups. A common advantage of novels in general is this ability to
is easier for us to recognise individual subjective experiences and empathize with these.
Hogan confirms this by recognizing categorical empathy as less likely to lead to compassion
and altruism than situational empathy. The ability to individualize characters is generally an
effective tool for writers to cultivate readers’ empathy. However, “Beginning with the first
paragraph of the novel, readers encounter fragmentation in the images of a shattered mirror
and ghostly handprints, but more importantly in the separation of one family member from
the other” (Travis 234). The characters are not just individualised, but they also become
completely isolated from each other and the society around them. Despite the fact that the
characters’ individual memories also portray that many of them have experienced similar
trauma, they cannot fully empathize with each other. Therefore, their perspectives become
“jagged pieces that do not fit comfortably together” (Travis 234). This dissonance becomes
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emotionally chaotic for the reader. A situation of extreme solitude emerges for the
protagonist, a solitude that also affects the reader. With Sethe unable to explain the
infanticide in a way that makes any of the other characters understand her, they begin to take
their distance from her “thick love,” and so does Morrison’s implied reader. The infanticide
separates Sethe from the society around her as well. Her memory of how their house went
from a busy place where people came and went to the extreme solitude it is in now invites
situational empathy from the reader. White folks from Sweet Home arrive, “leaving the 124
desolate and exposed at the very hour when everybody stopped dropping by” (Morrison;
Beloved 192). Paul D also distances himself from her when he finally accepts the truth of that
newspaper article. Travis points out that even he, who loves her, becomes afraid of her love.
Denver seems to be the one most distanced from Sethe emotionally, and is also isolated on
her own. Denver believes that she must “spend all of [her] outside self-loving [Sethe]” so
Sethe does not kill her (Morrison; Beloved 245). The reader comes to feel this isolation when
Denver portrays how she forgot her mother’s crime for a while, until Nelson Lord asked her
about it, and Denver had to “ask [Sethe] if it was true”. The psychological distance between
the women has become so long that Denver cannot “hear her [mother’s] answer.” After this
event everything becomes “so quiet” for Denver (p. 243). Denver and Sethe together also
become isolated in the house, away from the community around them in that “nobody – but
nobody visits[s] that house” and Denver never leaves it, because of her fear of “it” happening
again (p. 217, 242). When Beloved returns Denver’s life revolves around keeping Beloved
with her, but as Sethe discovers that Beloved is her returned daughter, Denver is again left in
solitude. “Sethe and Beloved cut Denver out of the games… [Sethe] cut Denver out
completely. Even the song that she used to sing to Denver she sang for Beloved alone” (p.
282). The reader also feels the women’s isolation portrayed through Paul D. We get a
powerful picture of Sethe’s solitude through his perspective. He reminds her, “your boys
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gone you don’t know where. One girl is dead; the other one won’t leave the yard “ (p. 194). It
is clear that the reality of her situation through his eyes is quite different than through her
own. She is completely isolated. For Paul D it seems like Sethe has lost everything by
“choosing” her freedom. And like him, the reader cannot let go of the thought that “there
could have been a way. Some other way” than to kill her children (p. 194). When Paul D
takes this distance to her love this way, even after his experience with slavery and abuse, the
reader is left with little hope of closing down the distance between her and the protagonist as
well. The distance between the reader and protagonist when the infanticide is revealed, like
the one between Paul D and Sethe, becomes a “forest that is locking the distance between
them, giving it shape and heft” (p. 194). The reader’s response to this forest of isolation can
be divided. On one hand, the reader becomes distanced to Sethe as well; if Sethe’s own
family is incapable of understanding her because “If they didn’t get it right off – she could
never explain” (p. 192). How can the reader then claim to empathize, or even sympathize
with her? On the other hand, Sethe’s solitude does invoke sympathy within the reader and the
situational empathy of loneliness and fear. However, the extremity of this fear still distances
her from the other characters. As readers we might generally empathize more easily on a
personal level, but when the isolation of the character becomes so extreme that even the other
characters are completely distanced, it problematizes the reader’s empathy for Sethe.
Morrison carefully closes in some of the distance between Sethe and the other characters, and
therefore also partially with the implied reader. For instance, when Stamp Paid approaches
124 again, and when the community arrives to drive away the bad spirit in 124, they slowly
close in the distance between them and 124 (p. 303). At the very end of the novel when Paul
D approaches the house for the second time, he makes an attempt to understand Sethe. The
ending is a powerful moment in which the two reconcile and join hands. One can wonder
whether this also is the moment when the reader should join hands with Sethe as well.
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“[Paul D] walks to the front door and opens it. It is stone quiet… Paul D steps inside…There
are too many things to feel about this woman…. He wants to put his story next to hers…He
leans over and takes her hand…his holding fingers are holding hers. (p. 318-322)”
The emotional image of two damaged souls holding hands is a powerful symbol of
togetherness. Paul D makes a moving attempt to imagine being in Sethe’s place, not to judge
or pity her but to understand and comfort her as her equal. Here, Morrison creates an
important picture of human empathy and shows its healing effect only when it is based on
equality. Empathy in itself is neutral, and the goodness of it only comes through
acknowledgement of difference. When Paul D attempts to put his story next to Sethe’s and
“not over, not under, not within, but next to,” Morrison asks her reader to do the same (Travis
237). Like him, even though the reader tries to understand Sethe, the best she can do is to
acknowledge Sethe’s version, but she cannot relate to it or approve the deed itself. It is an
understatement to say that it is difficult to imagine the life of a mother who kills her own
infant with a saw, to feel the stories of characters who have been tortured and deprived of
their freedom in the most cruel ways, to understand Denver’s fear of being beheaded in her
sleep by her own mother. The extremity of the events these characters altogether portray in
the most normalized way makes it difficult to claim the reader’s empathy. It is impossible to
say that the reader should be able to put herself in their places and be able to feel what they
feel. What Morrison gives her readers, is the opportunity to listen to silenced memories,
analyse and reflect upon what we cannot relate to and “put our stories next to theirs,” because
it is important that these stories are heard. Some of the characters show aversion in their
responses to the trauma in the shed. They find that the easiest way to cope, is to distance
themselves from it and so they do, one by one. Morrison portrays this avoidance most clearly
through Baby Suggs. She goes to bed after things get quiet, starts to dream colours, and
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finally dies. Stamp Paid portrays her as one who has completely given up after witnessing her
daughter-in-law’s attempt to “slay the children…If there had been sadness in her eyes [Stamp
Paid] would have understood it; but indifference lodged where sadness should have been”
(Morrison; Beloved 209). Indifference is emotional distancing and we also see that Stamp
Paid himself takes distance through his physical removal from 124. Paul D’s escape from the
house when he learns the truth about Sethe is also an act of aversion to her. As the characters
show emotional distancing from Sethe, the reader might want to do the same. However, since
she is introduced to so many perspectives the reader simply cannot turn away until she can
grasp the whole meaning, which again makes a never-ending circle, because Morrison never
gives it to her. Every time Sethe attempts to explain she circles around the event. The
sentence that closes the circle at the end of the novel, “this is not a story to pass on” keeps
Sethe’s traumas locked inside her, unreachable for the reader (pg. 324). In Beloved we see
how Toni Morrison complicates, limits, and prevents the reader’s empathy with Sethe
through multiple perspectives. This she does by giving voice to several portrayals of the
infanticide and by distancing Sethe from other characters, showing her reader how each new
CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION
Throughout the novel Beloved, the characters have been emotionally crippled by their
pasts. The mental and the spiritual wounds caused by slavery are still fresh and have not been
allowed to heal. They endure severe indignities, degradation, dehumanization and suffering
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under the law, and are consistently victims of prejudice from American society. Sethe, the
heroine, cannot overcome her outrage and sense of violation from her Sweet Home
experiences, nor can she work through the guilt she feels about her daughter's death.
Although Sethe and Paul D. are both dehumanized during their slavery experiences by the
inhumanity of the white people, their responses to the experience differ due to their different
role. Sethe managed to create her own family with Paul D. Within her psyche, she is a new
and a different woman. Thus, Sethe's process of healing in Beloved, her process of learning
to live with her past, is a model for the readers who must confront Sethe's past as part of our
own past, a collective past that lives right where we live. On the other hand, we have Paul D.
who initially appeared to be a normalizing force in Sethe's and Denver's lives. His entrance
into their private lives signalled the beginning of a healthy relationship for Sethe and the
Morrison has shown direction to black community for cooperative self-healing, land
forging a bearable life for them. She has shown that through communal interaction the
individual proceeds from repressive isolation to a developed sense of self. Here we see that
facelessness and anonymity imposed by the whites on the black in America is to be fought by
black in collective voice and ideology forged out of cultural and social absence. Morrison’s
conscious focus on collective rather that individual struggle is clarified through her repeated
assertions that Beloved is the story of people rather than a person. She says: “The book was
not about an institution- slavery with a capital ‘S’. It was about those anonymous people
called slaves. What they do to keep on, how they make a life, what they are willing to risk,
however long lasts, in order to relate to one another- that was incredible to me”(Bonnie 48)
Morrison has shown that when Afro- American are at different positions their way of
approach differ to one another: “You got two feet Seth, not four------ what you did was
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wrong” (p. 202) Morrison has also shown that when Afro-American women are more trusting
to their fellow beings and different times they are cheated not only by white but also by
blacks: “Sethe feels sorry to have been so trusting so quick to surrender” (p. 212) Sethe
mistakenly believing the completeness of her world with her daughter and giving her full
time even leaving her job again shows the devotion of Afro American women towards the
children: “The world is in the room. This here’s all there is and there need to be'' (p. 224)
Sethe though ruined by repeated rapes and untold humiliations by the white masters,
considers her children the best and the clean thing of herself, and hence, she would not let
anybody taint that part of her. That Sethe would go to any extent to dirty herself to retain the
purity of her children is sadly evident when she agrees for “Rutting among the headstones
with the engraver, his young son looking on” (p. 5) For ten minutes as a price to be paid for
engraving the word “Beloved” on the tombstone of her dead daughter. “But those ten
minutes-----were longer than life, more alive, more pulsating than the baby blood that soaked
her fingers like oil” (p. 9) This History, or rather her story, unfolds with her after prison life
but there are pages and pages of flash back, spared initially by the return of Paul D to 124
Bluestone Road outside Cincinnati in Ohio. The year is 1873, the year after the Emancipation
Edict. Technically blacks are free now, but they have to live with their harrowing past of only
a few years ago. Sethe is the daughter in law of Baby Suggs, the wife of Halle and the mother
of Howard, Buglar, Beloved and Denver. She is known as iron –willed women from the
beginning. However, her new master, to whom she sold, “Punched the glittering iron out of
Sethe’s eyes”. As a result, Sethe and the other slaves of sweet home flee during which Halle
is dislocated and not found, chances are there that he might have been shot dead. Sethe has to
run with her three children and the forth in the womb. However when the white master finds
her, instead of surrendering she stops them by hacking the throat of her daughter by hand
saw. In this manner, she ruthlessly refuges to send back her daughter to the same terrible
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world, which has fully sucked her virginity and vitality, Above all, what a black woman
considers heinous is a forced sex imposed on her by a white man and Sethe does not want her
daughter face the similar plight in future, In this event the physical act of murdering one’s
own child needs a lot of moral and emotional courage, It is the outcome of a compelling
situational background in which survival is uncertain every moment and dignity is put to acid
test every second of survival. Therefore, Sethe concludes that killing is putting her daughter
to safety. She says: “I took and put my babies where they’d be safe” (p. 87) Sethe, thus, is the
embodiment of black endurance and fortitude. She has been whipped so many times and with
so much ferocity by the whites that her back has been pulped to resemble a chokecherry tree.
This has left a permanent pain on her back and she does hardly allow anyone to touch it.
Slavery came between women and their children so often that it was dangerous to put that
much emotional energy into loving children. When they are taken away, it can really destroy
the person who loves them. Even the act of marriage for slaves has no meaning in the eyes of
their masters, it implied superfluous meaning of a woman sleeping with one man for quite
some time, until either one or both are sold, or are separated in misadventure. Another
epitome of the black courage in the novel is Baby Suggs. She is a rather powerful presence
then Sethe even when it comes to strong nerves. It is Baby Suggs who receives Sethe at
Bluestone when she returns to her after running away from slavery. Baby Suggs has already
crossed sixty. Except her brave heart there is nothing left intact in her body because slave life
had, “Busted her legs, back, head, eyes, hands, kidneys, womb and tongue” (p. 87) She starts
to clear a part of the forest and gathers all the blacks of the locality for preaching to them the
value of their race, rituals that would endow them with enough stamina to forget the past
humiliations and lead a happy life. “Accepting no title of honour before her name… she
became unchurched preacher, one who visited pulpits and open her great heart to those who
could use it… uncalled, un robbed, anointed, she let her great heart beat in their presence”
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There is such a force of conviction in her talk that the blacks gathered there forgot
temporarily their miserable plight and encouraged by her speech begin to laugh full -
heartedly: “Let your mother hear your laugh, she told them and the woods rang” (p. 87)
Similarly she tells them to dance and they dance and the ground under their feet trembles.
She tells them to cry out all their grief, their eyes run loose, and they weep out all their
sorrows. She teaches them to love everything in life and love “it hard.” As whites have
exploited all the parts of black body, Baby Suggs invites them to love all their limbs. She
encourages the black people not to be ashamed of their blackness, not to be distressed by
their past and slavery but to take a dignified look on all parts of their body, even on, she says,
“Your life holding womb and your life giving private parts” (p. 209). For the whites, enjoying
sex is not the rightful thing a black woman is expected to do. As told by her: “Slaves are not
supposed to have pleasurable feelings on their own; their bodies not supposed to be like that,
but they have to have as many children as they can to please whoever owned them. Still, they
were not supposed to have pleasure deep down” (p. 273) There are numerous instances of
slavery interfering in families. Baby Suggs's husband escaped, so they are apart. Paul D's
brother was sold away from Sweet Home. Stamp Paid had to allow his master to use his wife
sexually for a year. When there are families, it is dangerous to love too much because slavery
may steal away family. Sethe loves her children too much, and they all suffer for it. Thus, the
story of Beloved moves back and forth through time, telling in flashbacks the story of the
character's slave past. It is a portrait of the black slave woman's experience. The story is
important for its demonstration of the concern that slave mothers had for the welfare of their
personally, that would cause a mother to murder her child rather than allow her to experience
Like the slave narrative, Toni Morrison’s Beloved documents the accounts of several fictional
slaves, emphasizing on the importance of community. Even though they are fictional
characters based off of historical events, Morrison enlivens the Margaret Garner case in ways
the victims of the experience were unable to do so for a contemporary reader. The Garner
case was portrayed in a stereotyped and belittling newspaper article by a white reporter, but
Morison’s novel pries at the emotions and horrors buried because of slavery. While not all
stories are clearly heard, she allows portions to explain what they can, giving them ownership
of their stories that might not have always been theirs. Just as masculinity hides from public
and outsider attention, slavery hides the humanity behind the people.
Morrison’s Beloved contains features of the black slave narrative. It does not highlight a
single aspect of black culture, but the many that are grounded in slavery. The context of
slavery can also be another subjectivity in itself, just as race, class, gender, etc. because of its
dramatic effects on the individuals. While the readers experience the sufferings of slavery,
they also learn about the moments when slaves are needed to remain passive and quiet, and
also the times when they needed to be forwarded and threatening. Morrison’s narration
positions black males and their relationship in the community that obstructs their identity
through conflicting expectations. While a black man in slavery is needed to show power and
strength against the evil white master, in order to protect family and loved ones, they are
forced to keep fighting for freedom and safety until they break unless they find themselves
incapable and give in. Families were separated, fathers went missing, and the like Paul D,
assimilating into a new societal standing took sacrifice of self. This does not match the black
males’ new expectations to commit to the family, to settle, and to work in a class system that
once enslaved them. To assimilate, they must defy and protect with moderation. We can see
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this in the Civil Rights Movement as black as a collective, are torn between fighting or
conforming to the power the suppresses them. Morrison certifies the humanity and value of
the self, in a way remedying Paul D’s anxiety of his worth, by allowing other characters to
represent the people that were unable to represent themselves into abolition. Instead, the
black community stands as a collective community in a similar way that Paul D’s chain
brotherhood stands together on mutual ground and respect. In modern day, our society still
subdues black culture and historical black narratives as ‘past’ and irrelevant, while black
males are still enslaved in their role as a man in society. Looking at their ancestors, the black
male slaves that fought for their freedom, black males in today’s society will remain hidden
and submissive to their expectations or fight for the respectable life and community they long
deserve. Her narratives mingle the voices of men, women, children and even ghosts in
layered polyphony. Myth, magic and superstition are inextricably intertwined with everyday
verities, a technique that caused Ms. Morrison’s novels to be likened often to those of Latin
In “Sula,” a woman blithely lets a train run over her leg for the insurance money it will
give her family. In “Song of Solomon,” a baby girl is named Pilate by her father, who “had
thumbed through the Bible, and since he could not read a word, chose a group of letters that
seemed to him strong and handsome.” In “Beloved,” the spectre of a murdered child takes up
residence in the house of her murderer. Throughout Ms. Morrison’s work, elements like these
coalesce around her abiding concern with slavery and its legacy. In her fiction, the past is
often manifest in a harrowing present— a world of alcoholism, rape, incest and murder,
recounted in unflinching detail. It is a world, Ms. Morrison writes in “Beloved” (the novel is
set in the 19th century but stands as a metaphor for the 20th), in which “anybody white could
“Not just work, kill or maim you, but dirty you,” she goes on. “Dirty you so bad you
couldn’t like yourself anymore. Dirty you so bad you forgot who you were and couldn’t
think it up.”
But as Ms. Morrison’s writing also makes clear, the past is just as strongly manifest in
the bonds of family, community and race — bonds that let culture, identity and a sense of
links, her work unfailingly suggests, form the only salutary chains in human experience.
“She is a friend of my mind,” a character in “Beloved,” a former slave, thinks about the
woman he loves. “She gathered me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and gives
them back to me in all the right order. It’s good, you know, when you got a woman who
Ms. Morrison’s singular approach to narrative is evident in her first novel, “The Bluest
Eye,” written in stolen moments between her day job as a book editor and her life as the
single mother of two young sons. Published in 1970, it is narrated by Claudia McTeer, a
black girl in Ohio, who with her sister, Frieda, is the product of a strict but loving home.
The novel’s doomed heroine is their friend Pecola Breedlove, who at 11, growing up in an
America inundated with images of Shirley Temple and Dick and Jane, believes she is ugly
and prays for the one thing she is sure will save her: blue eyes. In a drunken, savagely
misguided attempt to show Pecola she is desirable, her father rapes her, leaving her pregnant.
Now an outcast both in the community and within her own fractured family, Pecola descends
Reviewing the novel in The New York Times, John Leonard commended Ms. Morrison
for telling the story “with a prose so precise, so faithful to speech and so charged with pain
and wonder that the novel becomes poetry.” The novel prefigures much of Ms. Morrison’s
later work in its preoccupation with history — often painful — as seen through the lens of an
individual life; with characters’ quests, tragic or successful, for their place in the world; with
the redemptive power of community; and with the role women play in the survival of such
communities.
Ms. Morrison explored these themes even more overtly in her second novel, “Sula”
(1973), about the return of a young woman, now a scandalous temptress, to her Midwestern
hometown and the ostracism she confronts there, and in her third, “Song of Solomon” (1977),
the book that cemented her reputation. That book, Ms. Morrison’s first to feature a male
protagonist, centres on the journey, literal and spiritual, of a young Michigan man, Macon
Dead III. Macon is known familiarly as Milkman, a bitter nickname stemming from the
widespread knowledge that his unhappy, neurasthenic mother, “the daughter of the richest
Negro doctor in town,” breast-fed him long past babyhood. (In “Song of Solomon” as in
“Sula,” Ms. Morrison depicts black bourgeois life as one of arid atomization.)The novel
recover a cache of gold said to have belonged to his family, but ultimately a voyage in pursuit
of self. “Song of Solomon” was chosen as a main selection by the Book-of-the-Month Club,
the first novel by a black author to be so honoured since Richard Wright’s “Native Son” in
1940.
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The first of her novels to have an overtly historical setting, the book — rooted in a real
19th-century tragedy — unfolds about a decade after the end of the Civil War. Before
the war, Sethe, a slave, had escaped from the Kentucky plantation on which she worked
and crossed the Ohio River to Cincinnati. She also spirited out her baby daughter, not
yet 2.
“Sethe had twenty-eight days — the travel of one whole moon — of un-slaved life,” Ms.
Morrison wrote. “From the pure clear stream of spit that the little girl dribbled into her face
to her oily blood was twenty-eight days. Days of healing, ease and real- talk. Days of
company: knowing the names of forty, fifty other Negroes, their views, habits; where they
had been and what done; of feeling their fun and sorrow along with her own, which made it
better. One taught her the alphabet; another a stitch. All taught her how it felt to wake up at
Then a slave catcher tracks Sethe down. Cornered, she cuts her daughter’s throat
rather than see her return to a life of degradation. Eighteen years have passed. Sethe has been
saved from the gallows by white Abolitionists and is later freed from jail with their help. She
has resumed her life in Cincinnati with her surviving daughter, Denver, with whom she was
pregnant when she fled Kentucky. One day, a strange, nearly silent young woman a little
older than Denver materializes at their door. Known only as Beloved, she moves into the
toward the end of the book. “She mine. See. She come back to me of her own free will and I
don’t have to explain a thing. I didn’t have time to explain before because it had to be done
quick. Quick. She had to be safe and I put her where she would be.”
Widely acclaimed by book critics, “Beloved” was made into a 1998 feature film
directed by Jonathan Demme and starring Ms. Winfrey. For mid-20th-century readers, one of
the most striking things about Ms. Morrison’s work was that it delineates a world in which
white people are largely absent, a relatively rare thing in fiction of the period. What was
more, the milieu of her books, typically small-town and Midwestern, “offers an escape from
Morrison” (1994; edited by Danielle Taylor-Guthrie), adding, “It is neither plantation nor
ghetto.”
Critical response to “Beloved” was overwhelmingly positive, though not uniformly so.
In a corrosive review in The New Republic, the African American critic Stanley Crouch
called it “a blackface holocaust novel,” adding: “The world exists in a purple haze of
overstatement, of false voices, of strained homilies; nothing very subtle is ever really tried.
‘Beloved’ reads largely like a melodrama lashed to the structural conceits of the miniseries.”
But the preponderance of opinion was on the other side. In January 1988, in the wake of the
novel’s publication, The Times Book Review published an open letter signed by two dozen
black writers, among them Maya Angelou, Amiri Baraka, Arnold Rampersad and Alice
Walker, lauding Ms. Morrison and protesting the fact that she had “yet to receive the
Toni Morrison indicates, in an interview she recorded with Home Vision in 1987 just
after finishing Beloved, that The Bluest Eye, Sula, Song of Solomon, Tar Baby are the results
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of such an artistic search. With Beloved, she goes a step further, opening her writerly eye to
look into the question why neither parent nor teacher remember what was done to the mind of
the African when being deported from home, further, why neither parent nor teacher were
aware of the big silence about everything concerning slavery. Speechless by the horrifying
reports she encounters when piling up the material that was to go into The Black Book that
was published by Random House in 1974, Morrison started to collect material on slavery and
its consequences on both the black and white mind and their respective narrative of the world,
which she wanted to use when she would have the strength to face “unspeakable things
unspoken” as both theorist and as writer. The white narrative she calls the Master Narrative.
Schoolteacher’s narrative would be an example. But also Melville’s and Jefferson’s. It is the
narrative of history, science, and the Humanities and their respective theories. The black
narrative she could not name so easily since ‘slave narrative’ was a term that had already
been used elsewhere. Moreover, slave narratives were often written for a white audience in
order to explain to white readers that the black writer was a human being, and not an animal,
to recall Phillis Wheatly[3], the poet, who had to pass a test given by Thomas Hutchinson,
governor of Massachusetts, and some other worthy Bostonians, before she was allowed to
claim her poems as her own. The slave narrative, then, was a narrative written by the slave
him/herself to tell a white readership what it is like to be a slave. The slave narrative attempts
to express the social and psychic pain and disruption of a person whose social functions were
awareness that “men and women were moved around like checkers. What she called the
nastiness of life was the shock she received on learning that nobody stopped playing checkers
just because the pieces included her children” (p. 23). The slave narrative was followed by
the social and political works of thinkers such as Frederick Douglas, W. E. B. DuBois, Martin
Luther King, Jr, or Malcolm X, writing against the master narrative in order to correct it.
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Women authors were not as much interested in forcing white people to recognize
them. In her essay ‘Reflections on the black woman’s role in the community of slaves’
Angela Davis observes: “This was one of the supreme ironies of slavery: in order to approach
its strategic goal – to extract the greatest possible surplus from the labour of the slaves – the
black woman had to be released from the chains of the myth of femininity.” In other words,
black women became emancipated long before white women did, and the price they had to
pay for this liberation was the one no one wanted to think about, let alone to memorize. There
is an interesting parallel. During the Second World War, white women were put in charge of
most jobs left open by fighting men. For once they became their own masters. While the
emancipated slave woman never wanted to go back into a master-slave relationship, it did not
occur to white women to fight for their new positions. It seems that the price the black
woman had to pay for her freedom was so high that nothing, but really nothing, could lull her
back into a state that forced her to kill her own baby. Morrison addresses this issue in several
articles. In 1971 she wrote a piece entitled, ‘What the black woman thinks about women’s
lib’ in which she differentiates between black and white social history: For years in this
country there was no one for black men to vent their rage on except black women. And for
years black women accepted that rage – even regarded that acceptance as their unpleasant
duty. But in doing so, they frequently kicked back, and they seem never to have become the
‘true slave’ that white women see in their own history. It is unarguable that the black woman
did the housework, the drudgery; true she reared the children, often alone, but she did all of
that while occupying a place on the job market, a place her mate could not get or which his
pride would not let him accept. And she had nothing to fall back on: not maleness, nor
whiteness, not ladyhood, not anything. And out of the profound desolation of her reality she
may very well have invented herself. It is the irony of literary history and language that we
now have to think about a term different from ‘slave narrative.’ If we agreed on ‘black
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narrative’ we might perhaps lose this terrible term. ‘Master narrative’ in the course of the
discourse, particularly as black narrative has become so strong precisely because of the pain
and agony that is connected with it. Master narrative is much easier to face. The grand
gesture into the future that we will possess and handle when the time has come. Our
reading/writing position is the one in which we sail off into a new world to possess it. The
gaze is the one into the future. The past we have made and know it. Master narrative is
always interested in universality. To have it all. To be all. To possess it all. Black narrative is
so much harder to take. There is this vast past no one wants to be reminded off.] Only by
reading each page of the Black Book again and again and again, might one start loosening
Narrating the past is, of course, a very difficult task. Yet it has to be done. One way of doing
it is writing fiction. It needs the artist to shape this material into a narrative that can do the
especially the master or the white or the superior could inflict on another race, the way they
are dehumanized, and the evil that comes with this institutionalized slavery. Beloved, in a
sense, is a retelling, rewriting of all the slaves who never got the chance to narrate their story
and what Morrison found in many of the slave narratives was that number of these narratives
had in a sense toned down their voice for the sake of a white audience. In an interview,
Morrison shares that she is just retelling and refilling those gaps that have been left in those
slave narratives. What Morrison insists upon is recovering and giving voice to all these kinds
of narratives. So even though we have the story of Sethe, we have to remember that the book
is dedicated to sixty million slaves. So, the rape of Sethe is the rape of the black women and
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even men who were exploited by their masters. A travesty on Sethe’s individuality is a
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11. Fultz, Lucille P. Toni Morrison : Playing with Difference. Urbana: University of
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30. Phelan, James. "Sethe's Choice: 'Beloved' and the Ethics of Reading." Style 32.2
https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2019/entries/empathy/
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION
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CONTENTS
Bibliography 110-113