Text: The Bonds of Love and the Boundaries of Self in Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” by Barbara A. Schapiro
Critical Lens: Feminist Lens
In the article, The Bonds of Love and the Boundaries of Self in Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” by Barbara A. Schapiro, it is about Schapiro talking about how people treat others differently. She talks about Beloved and was being honest about the book. Many men in the book look at women differently.
Something that I would disagree with this article would be how they kept talking about Beloved. Schapiro was talking about how this Denver and Sethe were "possessing and objectifying" each other.
"Beloved
You are my sister
You are my daughter
You are my face;you are me
I have found you again; you have come back to me
You are my Beloved
You are mine
You are mine
You are mine" (255).
As you can see, this shows how "sticky" they to Beloved. They are claiming her as if she is an object to them. Sethe and Denver are "possessing and objectifying" Beloved by how they are saying "You are my sister", "You are my daughter", and "You are mine". This shows "possessing and objectifying" by how they are clingy to their ghost child. They do not want her to live and want her to stay with her forever.
I like the points you make, but I think it's incredibly important to think about that generation differences. Beloved never experienced slavery and because of that can never understand it. In comparison to Sethe she is naive, nobody can experience what Sethe went through.
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