Part of what makes Morrison's work so intricate is that it
takes the history of enslavement and the narrative of social and self hate into
different psychological avenues. I think that you can pull many different themes from
the story. In my mind, the tension between remembering the past and being trapped by it
is probably one of the most telling elements of the narrative. It distinguishes itself
from other works in depicting characters who are mindful of the past, but also
struggling to overcome it. Sethe is a prime example of this. In seeing her world in
black and white and devoid of emotional interaction, she is both a product of slavery
and struggling to overcome its horrific effect. It is Sethe's character and her
relationship with Beloved and Paul D where this dynamic is most
evident:
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Beloved seems to have 'disremembered' almost all
of her past, and when Sethe comes to believe the girl is her lost daughter she 'was
excited to giddiness by the things she no longer had to remember.' Her words seem to
imply that Sethe tortures herself with memories as a sort of punishment..." The
conclusion of the novel seems to imply that finally putting the past behind her will
enable Sethe to survive. 'We got more yesterday than anybody,' Paul D. tells Sethe. 'We
need some kind of
tomorrow."
It is the need for
"some kind of tomorrow" that compels Sethe to recognize herself as "her best thing."
This is a balance that Morrison brings out in the work, causing pain to turn into a
source of strength.
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