Maternal Love In Beloved

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“God could not be everywhere and therefore he made mothers” so goes the old saying. Giving birth, breastfeeding, protecting and nurturing are all gifts and duties bestowed on mothers. A mother-child bond is regarded the world over as the most perfect and intimate of unions. This is because maternal love is often viewed as a reflection of God’s love towards his creation. However In Beloved, Morrison presents maternal love that is dangerous, devouring , and destructive. Morrison’s Beloved is a story of an African-American woman, Sethe, who escapes slavery with her children because she is determined to save them from the brutality she herself has had to experience. However her slave owner follows their trail and intends to return Sethe and her children to the his plantation. For fear of being caught decided to murder her children and then commit suicide. She succeeds on killing her first-born daughter named Beloved. The tainting of this maternal love for the sake of freedom is the main remains a debatable issue for readers and critics alike. As a reader the main question I had was : “Has she simply committed murder or a complex act of love?” . This paper will focus more on navigating this controversy and possibly answer the.” Can we relate this thematic framework , this discourse on maternal love , to the logic informing the novel’s ,multigenic identity ?” posed by Carl D , Malmgreen in the essay Mixed Genres and Logic Slavery in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
In Beloved, Sethe selfless love for her children is reflected perfectly dimensions of the Greco-Roman form of love known as Agape and Storge . Storge such a mother’s love for her children is also known as Familial love. Storge is the natural affection towards members of your family....

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...love, I fail to understand and completely comprehend her circumstances. The realities of slavery are only understood by the subjects of slavery. The unconscious and emotional outcomes of being denied and stripped of personal dignity , worth and individuality can lead to deep psychological scars that keep on scaring even after the slavery comes to an end . As Morrison subtly puts it “"Bit by bit, at 124 and in the Clearing, along with others, she had claimed herself. Freeing yourself was one thing; claiming ownership of that freed self was another." (pg.95) Sethe had been freed from slavery but life after slavery was one that needed her to take ownership of her life.Taking ownership of one’s life primarily involves self love and reconstruction of one’s identity.Only in loving ourselves , can we fully and truly embrace and love others sincerely without violation.

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