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Racism In Beloved By Toni Morrison

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Racism. Protests. Profiling. These three words are common buzzwords that are used in the United States media almost daily. They are used so often, some contend, that it has created a sense of apathy in the American public in regards to solving the age-old problem that has its roots grounded in slavery. Burns states, “[Toni] Morrison contends that the American history of slavery had been consciously “disremembered” so that it is conveniently shrouded by a comfortable state of national amnesia”. Likewise, in her novel the characters Sethe and Paul D in the novel Beloved by Toni Morrison also exist in a state of amnesia—but of their own slavery. In this essay, I will argue that in the novel Beloved, Toni Morrison use characters Sethe and Paul D and their willed forgetfulness of slavery and past actions to reveal the modern reader’s absent-mindedness of slavery and discussions of race. In the first few pages of the novel, Morrison uses Sethe’s forgetfulness of Beloved’s soul to parallel the forgetfulness of slavery in the average United States citizen. The narrator states, “Counting on the stillness of her own soul, she had forgotten the other one: the soul of her baby girl.” (5). The wording, “the other one [soul]”, implies that the soul of Beloved and that of Sethe are one, inseparable. Yet, Sethe seems to strive to place a barrier between the two souls in the interest of her inner “stillness”. For the modern reader, this sought-after “stillness” derives from the tendency

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