The Power Of The Black Community In Toni Morrison's Beloved

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In Toni Morrison’s Beloved, each time Beloved dies the cause is directly related to the community. Beloved’s two deaths illustrate the power of the black community of Cincinnati to harm the family of 124. These people are instrumental in the lives of Beloved and her family, however they do not use their power to help. The community believes they know what is best and their actions go against the best interests of the family of 124 by killing Beloved twice. Each death of Beloved drives first Baby Suggs, then Sethe to a death bed after losing their loved one. They do not warn the family of schoolteacher’s arrival, and later go to 124 to remove her from the house, acting on what they believed harming the family. In Cincinnati, the black community …show more content…

When slave catchers show up in town, the message is delivered quickly to alert the family so they can get to safety. Nobody comes to warn Baby Suggs or Sethe because of the lavish feast thrown at 124. The Feast leaves everyone so upset they isolate themselves from Baby Suggs and her family, “It made them furious. They swallowed baking soda, the morning after, to calm the stomach violence caused by the bounty, the reckless generosity on display at 124. Whispered to each other in the yards about fat rats, doom and uncalled-for pride” (162). They had mistaken Baby Suggs’ kindness and generosity for pride and arrogance, and when schoolteacher came into town, no one felt the obligation to warn her or her family. The woman who had graciously preached in the clearing and organized the feast out of good spirit was excommunicated. A few days earlier 124 was filled with people eating and having a good time due to the kindness of Baby Suggs. However, “When the …show more content…

Years pass after the death of Beloved and no one reaches out to Sethe or Denver; ostracized by the other citizens. Beloved returns only to end up draining the life out of Sethe, “when they ran low on food, and Denver watched her mother go without—pick-eating around the edges of the table and stove... Beloved, was getting bigger” (285). Beloved grows fat while Sethe sacrifices and begins to waste away. Denver is a spectator to the entire situation and sees that her mother will not last if she does not take action. To solve the situation at home, Denver is forced to reintegrate herself back into the community by asking Lady Jones for help and receiving food donations then going back to thank the donors. The black community of Cincinnati then takes it as their responsibility to look out for the family of 124. After Ella learns about the return of Beloved through Stamp Paid, “It was Ella more than anyone who convinced the others that rescue was in order” (301) --without being asked by Denver or Sethe— to remove the spirit of Beloved from 124. After the community indirectly caused the first death of Beloved 20 years earlier, a group of “thirty women made up that company and walked slowly, slowly toward 124” (303) to exorcise Beloved from the house where she was killed. After a brief standoff with Beloved

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