Sorrow
November 13, 2006 Arwa Abdulrahim English 132 J. L. Roderique Toni Morrison takes us back to the time after the Civil War and slavery in Beloved. She uses powerful themes and writing techniques to make that time come alive. On of her major themes is memory. Through the protagonist, Sethe, Morrison gives the reader a realistic insight on the power of memory has over a person. Beloved is based on the life of a slave woman named Margaret Garner. Margaret Garner was a slave in Kentucky but moved to Ohio after she was freed, just like Sethe. Before the story even starts, the reader is captivated by its epigraphy, ¿Sixty Million and more¿ they are four power words that gave me goose bumps when I understand the meaning behind them. Toni Morrison dedicated Beloved to the nameless, sixty million and more victims of slavery and the Middle Passage. How can four words hold so much significance? Toni Morrison truly surpassed any readers expectations. Beloved starts out by introducing the main characters and 124, the home in which Sethe lives. 124 is the center of the story. It is where everything unfolds. Throughout the story, 124 seem to have a varying atmosphere in Part One Toni Morrison describes it as Spiteful, loud in Part Two, and quiet in Part Three. The house is also described as full of venom, fury, rage, grief, and so on. I believe that the moods of 124 represent the ever changing feelings that the characters feel as they delve more into their past and confront their painful memories. Toni Morrison describes the house in a very vivid way, making it seem as if it really exists, one would think that she lived the disturbing and depressing events described in Beloved. 124 is haunted by Sethes dead daughter, whom we learn she calls Beloved. (We now know why Toni Morrison chose the title she did for this book.) The reader gets a sense of what they are in for in the first couple of pages of Beloved. In the beginning of part one, the malevolent spirit of Beloved rages in anger, which is definitely that of a baby¿s. The reader must wonder why Toni Morrison would start the story off with such a vicious event. In my opinion, she started it off in such a way to show the torment the inhabitants of 124 had to endure for eighteen years. She also mentions that Howard and Bulgar, Sethe¿s two sons, ran away from 124 shortly before Baby Suggs¿s, their grandmother, death. One day, Paul D., a friend of Sethe¿s from Sweet Home plantation, stops by to Sethe¿s house. He is disappointed to find out that Baby Suggs, whom he came to visit, is gone. Paul D¿s presence allows Sethe to finally open up about her past. We later find out that his presence had something to do with Beloveds departure. His presence also causes a change in the writing techniques that Toni Morrison uses. At that point, the reader will discover a shifting point between Sethe¿s present life and her past life. The story becomes ever so perplexing. It is hard for the reader to follow the order of events in chronological order. Beloved is, perhaps, the most confusing novel I have ever read so far. The story also takes a major turning point at Paul D¿s presence. The reader beings to see that the ghost of Beloved has mysteriously disappeared. One can help but wonder why. Paul D¿s presence must have replaced Beloveds. To Sethe, it might symbolize hope, something that she is not accustomed to. To Denver , Sethe¿s only child, however, it was devastating, though Beloved was only a ghost, she was the only thing that Denver could connect with out side of 124. After the Beloved¿s spirit was gone Denver was very upset with Paul D, but she started to get use to him being around. People used to be afraid of Denver and her mother and disrespect them. When Paul D was around he took them out and Denver liked that very much, she said that people did not look at them in the weird way that they use to. Now when they look at them they smile and even somet
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.
Overview
Toni Morrison--author of Song of Solomon and Tar Baby--is a writer of remarkable powers: her novels, brilliantly acclaimed for their passion, their dazzling language and their lyric and emotional force, combine the unassailable truths of experience and emotion with the vision of legend and imagination.It is the story--set in post-Civil War Ohio--of Sethe, an escaped slave who has risked death in order to wrench herself from a living death; who has lost a husband and buried a child; who has borne the unthinkable and not gone mad: a woman of "iron eyes and backbone to match." Sethe lives in a small house on the edge of town with her daughter, Denver, her mother-in-law, Baby Suggs, and a ...