"Beloved" is the daughter of a slave known as Seth. She escaped slavery with the help of a runaway slave and a woman named Denver, and she helped her as she walked too swollen. Seth was a slave, tortured and raped by her school teacher and his son. Seiser had to escape to prevent her children becoming slaves. When Sethe's teacher appeared in her mother's house in court, Sethe killed her girl's baby Beloved as she tried to commit suicide, after which her child returned to slavery and slaughtered her child Brought in went.
From the beginning, Beloved has focused on memory and history input. Every day she struggles in the form of an unforgettable slavery legacy, her threatening memory and her daughter's aggressive ghost. To Sethe, the main reason now is to repel the past. Because her daughter 's death and her experience at Sweet Home caused her to consciously remind the pain. However, because there is no history and memory, the repression of Seth has a problem.
Toni Morrison explores the concept of slavery through her novel "The Beloved" using various literary methods and postmodern concepts. The concept of memory is the theme of a novel, and Toni Morrison uses it to introduce the concept of life and the concept of slavery in Denver and Seth. Memory is the act of remembering the memory that happened in the past. Dear, depicted as a ghost, she embodies the concept of Sethe 's memory as she brought many memories to Sethe. Always
Tony Morrison Dear murder proves to be a story about dear slavery. The central figure is Sete who is a slave who escaped. Sethe killed a child named Beloved to "save her". This book was written in various chapters to present the viewpoints of various people. Tony Morrison proposes three kinds of love relationship, parentage relationship, brotherhood love, sexual relationship within or near slavery. Slavery weakens relationships during that time ... Tony Morrison's love book has helped restore the country from traumatic history hidden by unfortunate events such as slavery and intolerance. This big impact may be true, but one thing is definitely a lesson taught in this book. Mr. Morrison hopes that the basic information the reader knows is that life happens and people are hurt, but it is not a good way to hide the future with negative experience. Morrison warns the reader