Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Beloved essays

Beloved essays In Beloved, Toni Morrison portrays the barbarity and cruelty of slavery. She emphasizes the African Americans desire for a new life as they try to escape their past while claiming their freedom and creating a sense of community. In Beloved, "Much of the characters pain occurs as they reconstruct themselves, their families, and their communities after the devastation of slavery" (Kubitschek 115). Throughout the novel, Morrison uses color to symbolically represent a life complete with happiness, freedom, and safety, as well as involvement in community and family. In many scenes, Morrison uses color to convey a character's desire for such a life; while, in other instances, Morrison utilizes color to illustrate the satisfaction and fulfillment, which the characters experience once they achieve this life. Morrison uses color to symbolize the life Paul D desires as he is heading North. When Paul D asks the Cherokee man how he might get North. Free North. Magical North, (Morrison 112) he conveys his desire for a free, safe, happy and even somewhat magical life. Equating color with this life, the Cherokee man replies, Follow the tree flowers. When one thinks about or describes flowers, their colors are always important. In his journey North, Paul D would scan the horizon for a flash of pink or white...[or] blossoming plums (Morrison 113). By having Paul D search for colorful flowers, Morrison illustrates Paul Ds desire for a life full of safety, enjoyment, and freedom. Just as Paul D desires a better life after slavery, so does Baby Suggs. As a slave, Suggs was suppressed and did not experience the type of life she desired. Morrison indirectly demonstrates this by purposely leaving out any descriptions of color in Suggss life when she was a slave. Morrison uses this absence of color to express that Suggs had lived the life which she had longed for. She ...

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