The Significance Of Color In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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In everyday life colors are expressed in many different ways. Color has such deeper meaning in all sorts of literature, and each color has risen to be its own prime example of representation of illusion and depth. In our eyes Blue represents confidence, water, and heaven; green, growth and harmony; yellow, energy and happiness; red, passion and love. But in the novel Beloved the colors speak for themselves. Holding more than enough symbolism in the plot. The impact that colors play in the novel Beloved are a mystery but at the same time contains great depth. Two of the most dominant colors that stand out in the novel are black and white.
The time period during this novel takes place within the time of slavery and slavery takes all the color
Looking for color quotes, not only does Morrison use many colors that are part of the rainbow including red, green, white, blue, yellow, and pink as strong symbols, but with the mystic of describing colors without using color words. When Morrison describes Halle smearing “creamy butter” on his face we can feel and see the tone of yellow being used. We can visualize the harsh grey of the “iron bit” of Paul D, the rich black from the blackberries, the pure white from the falling snow, and the vivid orange of the fire licking Sixo’s skin. We can vividly see all these images presented in the type of form that Morrison puts them and because of the painting Morrison does with her
Amy’s red velvet, for example, is a painting of hope and a brighter future, also Paul D’s “red heart” represents sensation and passion. Generally, red seems to connote fatality and the nature of human existence. However, in Beloved, red images simultaneously refer to life and death, from here to not here. The red roses that line the road to the carnival serve to the carnival’s arrival in town and announce the beginning of Sethe, Denver, and Paul D’s new life together. The “red” rooster indicates manly life to Paul D, but it is a manhood that Paul D himself has been denied. Sethe’s memory is overflowing with the red of her daughter’s blood and the pink of her gravestone, both of which have been bought at a valued

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