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    with a personality that doesn’t exist.” Toni Morrison must have also had this captivation with characters when writing her novel‚ Beloved‚ as she created such extraordinary and passionate characters that bring out many emotions of the reader. The protagonist of Beloved‚ Sethe‚ is such a complex part of the story that her character really pushes the audience to the threshold of feelings such as pity‚ frustration and pleasure. Molly Abel Travis agrees with Morrison to some extent in her article‚ “Beyond

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    admired child in the 1940s: Shirley Temple” (Bump). Morrison recalls in elementary school‚ a young friend told her that she wanted to have blue eyes. Morrison writes‚ The Bluest Eye was my effort to say something about that; to say something about why she had not‚ or possibly ever would have‚ the experience of what she possessed and also why she prayed for so radical an alteration” (The Bluest 77). When she was writing The Blues Eye‚ Morrison was attempting to make people realize that there are

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    The black arts‚ characterized by acute awareness‚ produced writers like Toni Morrison‚ Ishmael Reed‚ and Alice Walker. Toni Morrison undeniably is an author who internalizes the main concerns of the black aesthetic. She writes about black oppression‚ consciousness and tradition. Her major

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    Chapter 2 In the novel The Bluest Eye (1970) by Toni Morrison‚ I have seen that there is more suffering caused by a diseased mind than by a diseased body. The idea of a “diseased mind” is a mental illness while the “diseased body” is a physical illness or injury and though the former is more dominant‚ yet both are displayed by the characters in the novel. The Bluest Eye is Morrison’s first novel and also a very powerful study of how African-American families and particularly women are affected

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    under her mother’s influence? These questions are answered in both novels Breathe‚ Eyes‚ Memory by Edwidge Danticat and Sula by Toni Morrison with some from similar views‚ and some from different views. For ages‚ a mother’s love is always mentioned as the symbol for pure and selfless love. Digging deep in the complex maternal love‚ nevertheless‚ both Morrison and Danticat draw an unexpected conclusion that daughters are somewhat detestable to their mothers. Perhaps the biggest impression

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    In Toni Morrison’s novel‚ The Bluest Eye‚ focuses on society’s capacity of influencing and inferiorizing people of color‚ especially African Americans. Throughout the novel‚ the story of a young black girl named Pecola‚ shows the treatment and discrimination she experiences in her community. The cause of her problems is due to her ugliness‚ which society does not tolerate acceptable because “all the world agreed that a blue-eyed‚ yellow-haired‚ and pink-skinned” is the ideal beauty for a girl (20)

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    Sethe's Change In Beloved

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    Toni Morrison´s novel Beloved was written and based on the American Civil War era. The author´s use of certain characters in the story provides the reader with an inside to the consequences and results of the Civil War and slavery in the United States. The novel is based upon the characters who have been slaves or have undergone an escape from their masters. The most prominent character in the story is Sethe who had previously been a former slave and remains haunted by this and all the other scarring

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    Toni Morrison’s novel “Beloved” tells the unspoken story of black people prior to and after the abolishment of slavery. Throughout the novel‚ the main characters -- Sethe‚ Paul D‚ Baby Suggs‚ Denver‚ and Beloved -- countervail an alien world that has stripped them of their humanity. The novel is a fractured history of slavery’s legacy as it delves into the “disremembered” sufferings of the black community that have been so facilely stashed away in a complacent state of national amnesia. Through the

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    “Anything dead coming back to life hurts” (Morrison 35). Does anyone have a firm grasp on who or what Beloved actually is? Beloved is the focal point of Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved‚ but she has also been the center of many debates. Morrison’s depiction of Beloved throughout the novel is unclear and much is left up for interpretation by the reader. Is Beloved the ghostly reincarnation of Sethe’s murdered baby‚ a flesh and blood version of the spirit Paul D. drives from the house? Or is Beloved unquestionably

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    In the novel Beloved‚ the author Toni Morrison demonstrates how the past‚ when not dealt with‚ can have a negative and stunting effect on the future. By constructing a narrative that allows for the past‚ present‚ and future to intertwine‚ Morrison illustrates how each time period is not an isolated entity because of the existence of memories. Throughout the novel‚ the characters work to suppress the past due to the horrific events that occurred in slavery. However‚ through this active avoidance of

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