Preview

The Voice of the City Anita Desai

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1664 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Voice of the City Anita Desai
Beloved is a novel by the American writer Toni Morrison. Set after the American Civil War (1861–1865), it is inspired by the story of an AfricanAmerican slave, Margaret Garner, who temporarily escaped slavery during 1856 in Kentucky by fleeing to Ohio, a free state. A posse arrived to retrieve her and her children under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which gave slave owners the right to pursue slaves across state borders. Margaret killed her two-year-old daughter rather than allow her to be recaptured. Beloved's main character, Sethe, kills her daughter and tries to kill her other three children when a posse arrives in Ohio to return them to Sweet Home, the plantation in Kentucky from which Sethe recently fled. A woman presumed to be her daughter, called Beloved, returns years later to haunt Sethe's home at 124 Bluestone Road, Cincinnati. The story opens with an introduction to the ghost: "124 was spiteful. Full of a baby's venom."[1] The novel won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988.[2] It was adapted during 1998 into a movie of the same name starring Oprah Winfrey. During 2006 a New York Times survey of writers and literary critics ranked it as the best work of American fiction of the past 25 years.[3] The book's epigraph reads "Sixty Million and more," dedicated to the Africans and their descendants who died as a result of the Atlantic slave trade.[4] The book concerns the story of Sethe and her daughter Denver after their escape from slavery. Their home, 124 Bluestone Road, Cincinnati, is haunted by a revenant, whom they believe to be the ghost of Sethe's daughter. Because of the haunting —- which often involves objects being thrown around the room —- Sethe's youngest daughter, Denver, is shy, friendless, and housebound, and her sons, Howard and Buglar, have run away from home by the time they are thirteen years old. Soon afterward, Baby Suggs, the mother of Sethe's husband Halle, dies in her bed. Paul D, one of the slaves from Sweet Home, the plantation

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In “Beloved” by Toni Morrison, the novel follows the life of an ex-slave African American woman named Sethe, living in Ohio in the 1800s told from both third person omniscient and limited. But even more it explores sacrifices, particularly shown with Sethe. Throughout many events Sethe sacrifices continuously to benefit her children and the ones she loves.…

    • 860 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chloe Anthony Wofford, better known Toni Morrison, was born on February 18, 1931 in Lorain, Ohio. She is a Noble Prize- and Pulitzer Prize- winning American novelist. Her well known novels are The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, and Beloved. She is the second oldest of four children. Her father, George Wofford, worked as a welder but he also had other jobs to support his family. Her mother, Ramah, was a domestic worker. She wasn’t aware of racial divisions until her teenage years. In the future she majored in English at Howard University in 1953. Later on completed her masters in 1955 at Cornell University. She then went to work at Howard University to teach English. She found her true love, Harold Morrison, and got married in 1958 then had her…

    • 568 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Toni Morrison and William Faulkner are two of America’s most successful writers who seem to share many similar themes and motifs, Especially between Morrison’s Beloved and Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying. Both of these novels use multiple narrators, present their characters with struggles of their own identity, and show the difficulties of the people born into the lowest social class.…

    • 1271 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Toni Morrison’s novel, Beloved, embodies the painful memories and trauma that former slaves had to go through during the Reconstruction Era. Morrison tells a story of a former slave woman named Sethe that runs away from her plantation called Sweet Home, with her newborn daughter, Denver, while her other children are back with her mother-in law. Her owners are coming to look for her to take her back to the plantation. When they arrive she runs , and she kills her daughter and tries to kill the other three so they would not have to go through the pain of being a slave as she was. Sethe is shunned from her community for her heinous act and lives in a house that is haunted by her dead baby's vengeful ghost.…

    • 1966 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Toni Morrison’s Beloved is a novel that follows the life of Sethe, an escaped slave; her mindset after slavery, and the stories of other people in her life. By using distinctive time frames, the text presents various difficulties that arise in Sweet Home, a plantation in which Sethe, Paul D, Paul A, Paul F, Sicko, Halle, and Baby Suggs are previously enslaved. The novel offers ways in which the characters deal with the repercussions of slavery. The ultimate question Toni Morrison poses to readers is: Are slaves truly free after slavery? More to the point, is physical freedom synonymous to being wholly free? Morrison consistently addresses freedom apart from the physical release from slavery. The author depicts a lack of complete freedom in…

    • 1801 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the words of Toni Morrison herself, “Freeing yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was another”. Beloved is a narration of a former slave, Sethe who is trying to obtain true freedom. Though she no longer belongs to a master of a plantation, she is chained to her trembling past. Through the use of her characters, Morrison effectively conveys the memorable horrors of slavery that impact their everyday life and displays the powerful social class whites had in the eighteen century.…

    • 1406 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Black Americans were coerced to only see themselves from a perception of whiteness. W.E.B. Du Bois’s, The Souls of Black Folks, states, “…the American Negro, ‘born with a veil…’ can achieve ‘no true self-consciousness’ but can only ‘see himself through the revelation of the other [i.e. white] world’” ( DuBois 410). Morrison herself notes “…that slaves narrators, ‘shaping the experience to make it palatable’ for white readers, dropped a ‘veil’ over ‘their interior life’” (Rody 97). This “veil” represents obdurate ideals of white oppression exercised before and subsequently after the period of slavery. In Beloved, Morrison posits an erroneous assertion in the relationship between veils and slavery:…

    • 329 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In her novel Beloved, Toni Morrison explores the paradoxical nature of love both as a dangerous presence that promises suffering and a life-giving force that gives the strength to proceed; through the experiences of the run-away slave Sethe. The dangerous aspect of love is revealed through the comments of Paul D and Ella regarding the motherly love of Sethe towards her children. Sethe's deep attachment to her children is deemed dangerous due to their social environment which evidently promises that the loved one of a slave will be hurt. On the other hand, love is portrayed as a sustaining force that allows Sethe to move on with her life. All the devastating experiences Sethe endures do not matter due to the fact that she must live for her children. Although dangerous, Sethe's love finally emerges as the prevalent force that allows her to leave the past behind and move on with her life.…

    • 1401 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    PTSD In Beloved

    • 1054 Words
    • 5 Pages

    “Her brain was not interested in the future. Loaded with the past and hungry for more, it left no room to imagine, let alone plan for more, the next day” (Morrison, 70). In Toni Morrison's novel Beloved, she captures the emotion and anguish that those enslaved in America experienced and allows her readers to understand it through her words. Sethe’s past experiences literally haunt her and prevent her from being able to move on to the future because even though she was not physically someone’s slave, she still has to deal with her psychological PTSD. The suffering she felt as a slave, getting her milk stolen, and murdering her own child interfered with her ability to get up and move on to a brighter future. Every step she took, every choice…

    • 1054 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Cora Lee

    • 1804 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The growth of the woman's movement, and its impact on the consciousness of African-American women in particular, helped fuel a "black women's literary renaissance” of the 1970s, beginning in earnest with the publication of "The Bluest Eye" (1970), by Toni Morrison. Morrison went on to publish "Sula" (1973) and "Song of Solomon" (1977); her fifth novel, the slave narrative "Beloved" (1987) became arguably the most influential work of African-American literature of the late 20th century (rivaled only by Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man"). The success of writers like Morrison, Maya Angelou (poet and author of the 1970 memoir "I Know Why the Caged…

    • 1804 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Both The Handmaid 's Tale and Beloved are stories about slavery: escape from slavery and the effect slavery has on people. In The Handmaid 's Tale, the protagonist, Offred, tells the reader of her experience as a reproductive slave in a society that no longer exists. Beloved gives the reader a look at what life is like for a "free" slave, from the point of view of its main characters through a series of flashbacks. While both stories have two completely different premises, they have far more similarities than they have differences. The similarities in these books impart a strong message to the reader about freedom.…

    • 1046 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Beloved: Analysis

    • 7231 Words
    • 29 Pages

    From the beginning, Beloved focuses on the import of memory and history. Sethe struggles daily with the haunting legacy of slavery, in the form of her threatening memories and also in the form of her daughter 's aggressive ghost. For Sethe, the present is mostly a struggle to beat back the past, because the memories of her daughter 's death and the experiences at Sweet Home are too painful for her to recall consciously. But Sethe 's repression is problematic, because the absence of history and memory inhibits the construction of a stable identity. Even Sethe 's hard-won freedom is threatened by her inability to confront her prior life. Paul D 's arrival gives Sethe the opportunity and the impetus to finally come to terms with her painful life history.…

    • 7231 Words
    • 29 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    This novel is unlike any I have ever read. It is a story of survival and sorrow. It shows triumph over tragedy as well as tragedy over triumph. The way that Margaret Mitchell brings the Old South to life through these pages is, undoubtedly, the best of all time. The novel is captivating in all its aspects. This story takes place right before, duration of, and the Restoration through, the Civil War. The story itself is centered on a southern belle named Scarlett O’Hara.…

    • 1983 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    anita desai

    • 3853 Words
    • 16 Pages

    Magda Costa interviewed Anita Desai in Barcelona, 30 Jan 2001. Desai was in Spain to launch the Spanish and Catalan translations of Fasting, Feasting.…

    • 3853 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Anita Desai

    • 322 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Won the Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize for her novel "Fire on the Mountain" and her children's book "The Village by the Sea" (1982), won the Guardian Children's Fiction Award.…

    • 322 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays