A Disturbing Scene In Toni Morrison's Beloved

Improved Essays
A disturbing scene in Beloved contains many parallels to modern society, specifically the way in which black people are treated in America. When Sethe finally could not bear the cruelty of slavery any more, she fled to the North in hope for a better life for her and her children. Unfortunately, because she could produce many healthy children, she was viewed as a valuable asset to her owner. The schoolteacher believed she was an asset too valuable to simply forget about. When the schoolteacher found where Sethe had fled, Sethe had to make a crucial decision. She could either kill her children and herself to ‘save’ them from slavery, or she could submit to the white men and go back to a life that could be considered worse than death. The schoolteacher was the embodiment of harm and is parallel to the vicious injustice and discrimination that goes on in the United States of America. On surface level, the scene seems like solely a terrifying experience, but there is much more complexity to the matter. The traumatizing experience changed the lives of everyone present. Inside the shed it said, “Two boys bled in the sawdust and dirt at the feet of a n----- woman holding a blood-soaked child to her chest with one hand and an infant by the heels in the other.” Morrison …show more content…
Although progress is being made, the denial of racism in America greatly slows that progress. Simply because overt racism has drastically decreased, many people love to argue that black people should stop complaining about racism because it does not exist. An institutionalized racism that arose from slavery still haunts the nation. When a problem like racism transforms from simply yelling racial slurs to a prison industrial complex, many people like to simply believe it doesn’t exist because they don’t want to think and examine the complexity of the

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Desire, often defined as a sense of longing or an emotional craving, is at its core, a driving force in each of our lives. No one lives without desire. It is such an innate facet of our humanity that there are literally religions based around the concept of living without desire. The concept itself has many connotations, ranging from simple desires like food and human interaction, to the extreme, being greed. It has been proposed that desire is a form of slavery each and every one of us is a victim to.…

    • 1094 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Although it is true that people of color are no longer discriminated against by laws that enforce racial segregation within schools and the work place, the progress that was made from the 1960s Civil Rights Movement had only skimmed the surface of a deeply embedded, racist American system. While the traditionally overt bigotry that has shaped white opinion since the founding of our nation has receded during the latter half of the 20th century, people of color are continually disadvantaged by disguised discrimination and a disproportionate inequity of opportunity. In regard to the peculiar inability of whites to recognize modern day racism Wise explains, “Because we are so used to thinking of racism as the traditional rejectionism and blatant bigotry of the past, we sometimes miss the subtle ways in which racism has shape-shifted to fit more comfortably within a modern context” (Wise 88). One reason why this modern-day racism is so difficult for white folks to detect is because it has cleverly shape-shifted to adopt the white perspective as the accepted norm. Interestingly enough, it is exactly the undistinguishable nature of racism 2.0 which allows it to operate undisturbed within the structure of…

    • 1030 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The continual reminder that she is “the granddaughter of slaves” looms over her, but it doesn’t upset her, instead she feels that slavery is quite literally a thing of the past, and what matters…

    • 1376 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Cruelty is the infliction of pain towards others and this can be through physical means or mental means. It is commonly used to show one’s superiority over another, or at times it could be perpetrated because one has lost themselves due to cruelty being inflicted on them. In many literary works, major social or political factors create a great deal of cruelty to be build up in an individual. In Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved, cruelty affected many lives deeply. Slavery is a cruel act that was imposed on the black society during majority of the 1800s, and many of the characters in the novel are still suffering from that effect even though it’s been over a decade since it’s been abolished.…

    • 1245 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In 2011, just over a quarter of people believed that racism was a big problem in America. Five years later, about forty-nine percent of people believe racism is a major concern (Terry). This shows that not only is racism a problem, but that it has been growing in recent years. Many black people in America aren’t given the same opportunities as their white counterparts. They are oppressed into the ghettos of our large cities, given less access to jobs and quality housing, while the kids are sent to under-resourced schools.…

    • 1272 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    The novel Beloved, written by Toni Morrison, follows the lives of those who survived the horrors of slavery and how these experiences affect their decisions/actions in the future. Each character faced different types of mistreatment due to slavery, whether it was mentally or physically, that caused a significant impact to their lives. All these mistreatments the characters had to face had caused them to act a certain way in the future. Morrison would use multiple literary device in each character to show what each character had to face when they were slaves and that would allow the character to think their action in the future was justifiable weather it was morally right or if it was morally wrong. Throughout the book, multiple literary devices…

    • 1487 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Beloved: The Difficult Road to Recovery Eighteen sixty-three, President Abraham Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation, ending slavery. Many would recall the end to slavery in the mid nineteenth century as a victory for African Americans formerly held in bondage. Be that as it may, those who were slaves, although free, continued to be subjected to the harsh memories of a past filled with tortuous suffering. Protagonist in Toni Morrison’s novel, former slave named Sethe, exemplifies the damaging effects that slavery had on those who were affected by it. Despite the adversity, Sethe also embodies the indefatigable human spirit, present in all slaves, that is able to persist through the hardship of being slave-confronting external factors…

    • 1888 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the novel Beloved, by Toni Morrison, one of the main characters, Sethe, is faced with a difficult decision. Should she kill her children or allow them to possibly live a terrible life? Well some might argue that what sethe did was wrong, but there are many reasons to believe that Sethe was right to kill her children. Sethe's decision to kill her children was the right choice because keeping them alive would have lead to possible enslavement, lack of community, and no sense of self.…

    • 1181 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    She did not look at them; she simply swung the baby toward the wall planks, missed and tried to connect a second time, when out of nowhere—in the ticking time the men spent staring at what there was to stare at—the old nigger boy, still mewing, ran through the door behind them and snatched the baby from the arch of its mother 's swing" (Morrison 141). Sethe chose to take an extreme action to secure the safety of her children rather than have them taken back to Sweet Home to live, work, and die as slaves. She knows how dehumanizing slavery can, from being compared to an animal to having her breast milk stolen. The pain and suffering that consumes her eventually takes shape as Beloved. Beloved is seemingly back from the dead, taking her place in Sethe 's life as if she was never killed.…

    • 1770 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Racism has existed since the early 1600s when African Americans were first brought to America against their will to work as slaves. It wasn’t until the Civil Rights Movement, beginning in 1955, that the lives of African Americans started to transform and the U.S. Supreme Court began to terminate “Jim Crow” laws and ban segregation (“Civil Rights Movement,” n.d.). The main goal of eradicating segregation was to reach what is known as “racial equality”, which is the balance between all the races making everyone equal. Since the Civil Right Movement, our country has continued to make steps of improvement including, swearing in our nation’s first black president and the fact that black people and white people are now able to go to the same school.…

    • 1516 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Janiyah Belfor Critical Analysis on “ Defining Racism: “Can We Talk” Beverly Daniels Tatum’s “Defining Racism: “ Can We Talk”, published in 2003, explains that racism and prejudice still exist in today’s world and are not just something of the past. Many people are left in the dark about the daily racist situations that occur in the world and covered by the media. From what I understood from the article it is everyone's job to get their own understanding on racism and what it is today. Tatum would like people to recognize that racism still exist and it should be stopped. While Tatum’s evidence is relevant and her tone is clear, she unfortunately included a logical fallacy.…

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    This disconnection causes Sethe to alienate herself from the community, thus alienating her daughter Denver as well: Not anybody ran down to say some new white folks with the Look just rode in. The Look every Negro learned to recognize along with his ma’am’s tit. Nobody warned them, and … it wasn’t the exhaustion from a long day’s gorging that dulled them, but some other thing….like meanness….that let them stand aside, or not pay attention, or tell themselves somebody else was probably bearing the news already to the house of Bluestone Road where a pretty little slave girl had recognized a hat, and split the woodshed to kill her children (157) This failure of the community leads to Sethe murdering Beloved (Sethe’s crawling already baby). After she commits infanticide in order to spare her child from the chokehold of slavery, the community rejects Sethe.…

    • 1773 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This paper analyses the theme of motherhood in the novels ‘The Color Purple’ and ‘Beloved’. Sethe and Celie are compelled to be separated from their own children. And the source of their separation is slavery. Sethe is the slave of racism and Celie is the slave of Patriarchal society. The paper reveals the psychological damage of slavery to the mother- child relationship.…

    • 1351 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Black women began to follow in the footsteps of their ancestors and went on to nanny little white children. While this part in the Black woman’s role in society had been consistent, there was a new element involved. They had their own children, and yes their ancestors too had their own children, but on the plantation taking care of those children was not a top priority because they would have jobs to do during the day that occupied their time. But in this new life in the North, little Black children did not have work to do on the plantation so the had free time, which led to poor decisions. It was among this series of unfortunate events that the role of the Black woman reformed; while she mothered the White baby (Wright 117) she was concerned about her own children.…

    • 790 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays