The Past Exposed In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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Many of us have always wanted to run away; run away from home, from our job, and our past. The implications of running from our past prove to be in vain due to the fact of how much as we like it we will forever be intertwined with our past life choices. Applying to this to the novel by Toni Morrison called Beloved the themes of the past claws holding the main protagonists. To the simple assumption that no one can escape their past. Regarding to David Lawrence’s article “Fleshly Ghost and Ghostly Flesh: The Word and the Body in Beloved”. Lawrence alludes Bryon Bunch’s quote in Light in August, “…no matter how much people might talk about escape from living… the dead are the ones who do the most damage…” Analyzing this quote it basically means …show more content…

Eventually Paul D learns the shocking truth of what happened to Beloved (baby version). Sethe had escaped from Sweet Home with her three other children while she was pregnant with Denver. Hiding in a house in fear of the slave master coming to take them back to Sweet Home and back to the horrible life as a slave Sethe in an act of both love and insanity planned to murder her children so they wouldn’t live in the hell she was living in. She started with Beloved by cutting off her head, and when she was discovered she had realized what she had done. From learning this information from the Stamp Paid, who stopped Sethe from killing Denver while she was pregnant, becomes angry and appalled. Paul D leaves the home of 124 leaving Sethe and Denver to fend for themselves with Beloved. Sethe and Byron share the same tragedy of having their image in the face of their piers tarnished by the overwhelming sense of love. Not thinking for themselves and their needs. This is seen in the ending parts of Beloved when Sethe gives up everything she loves as well as her job to keep Beloved happy (or in a way feed sense Beloved enjoys sweet things), from the guilt of what she had done to

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