The Importance Of Dreams In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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Beloved is a complex character. She can be described as both innocently dependent and a malevolently temperamental. This passage points to what is going on with Beloved on a deeper, more psychological level. In this passage, Beloved is using her intuition. The first sentence is pointing to the fact that Beloved intuitively knows her physical existence is unstable, knowing without really knowing how she knows. It’s possible that one day she could just wake up in pieces. Undo, unravel, be taken apart, all while she is in her most innocent, passive state. While she’s in this state, she’s dreaming. Sigmund Freud would suggest that during her dream state, Beloved’s unconscious has the opportunity to be acted out.
Anthony Shafton in his book The African American Way with Dreams notes that “African Americans, as a group, believe that dreams matter.” His work contains interviews with more than one hundred African Americans, proving that dream interpretation was common in African-American culture. Connecting back to African culture, this practice could be seen as a survival technique, a way to connect the living world to the spirit one.
Morrison uses two dreams to convey Beloved’s more complex emotions. Both dreams involve a sort of consumption. The first dream, one of explosion, can be interpreted in several different ways. Many times, an explosion in a dream can represent repressed emotions and their way of erupting forcefully and violently. Explosion in a dream might indicate repressed anger. Beloved is angry because she feels like she’s been betrayed, tossed aside and forgotten. Explosion can also be a parallel to destruction. One interpretation of Beloved is that she’s the physical manifestation of a destructive past of slavery, one ...

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...he stages of growing up physically and emotionally. What’s interesting is that in the following paragraph, the reader learns that this tooth is a wisdom tooth. Wisdom teeth are generally only removed when they become a useless or impacted and usually require intense oral surgery to expel. It would be appropriate for Beloved, as an eighteen year old to undergo this type of surgery but instead she pulls her tooth out herself. This gives Beloved a certain type of control over her own existence.
Morrison is showing the beginning of Beloved’s dissolution. If Beloved is the embodiment of the past, this passage is foreshadowing the transformation that the past’s role in Sethe’s life will endure by the end of the novel. As Sethe comes to term with her past, she begins to heal. No longer is the past an oppressive force but instead something she carries with her and in her.

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