Toni Morrison's Use Of Narrative Voice In Beloved

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In Toni Morrison’s Pulitzer prize-winning novel Beloved, the past lingers on. The novel reveals to readers the terrors of slavery and how even after slavery had ended, its legacy drove people to commit horrific actions. This truth demonstrates how the past stays with us, especially in the case of Sethe and Paul D. The story focuses on previous slaves Paul D and Sethe, as well as Sethe’s daughters Denver and Beloved, who are all troubled by the past. Although both Paul D and Sethe are now free they are chained to the unwanted memories of Sweet Home and those that precede their departure from it. The memories of the horrific past manifest themselves physically as Beloved, causing greater pains that are hard to leave behind and affect the present. In the scene soon after Beloved arrives at 124 Bluestone, Sethe's conversation with Paul D typifies Morrison’s theme of how the past is really the present as well. Morrison is able to show this theme of past and present as one through her metaphors and use of omniscient narration. Through the omniscient narrator, readers are able to see the full story behind what the characters tell each …show more content…

A metaphor is used to show how Paul D compares his heart to a tobacco box. We learn that he feels he has a “tobacco tin buried in his chest where a red heart used to be. Its lid rusted shut. He would not pry it loose now in front of this sweet sturdy woman…” (Morrison 86). The rusted tin box symbolizes his unwillingness to talk about his past. The bitter painful memories of his past hurts for him to recall. Since he is unwilling to deal with his past he roams around unwilling to settle down. Once he finds Sethe he begins to settle down, however he is still unable to fully express his feelings. This results in a lack of connection between the

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