Supernatural Occurrences in "Beloved" and "The Painted Drum"

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Magic has been a subject of intrigue for centuries. Human beings are fascinated with the unknown and unexplainable. In Toni Morrison’s Beloved and Louise Erdich’s The Painted Drum, many different supernatural elements are at work. In Beloved, a toddler ghost is reincarnated as a young woman who wrecks havoc on her family’s financial, emotional, and physical well being; at the center of Erdich’s novel is a Objiwe drum and the strange power it has over a Native American community. There are similarities and differences in the utilization of this literary technique, but in both cases the authors employ unexplainable occurrences to develop characters and communities. The effect of these unearthly happenings are deep, and they allow characters to showcase their true feelings, to set the mood of the novels, and also to draw the reader into the story.

"124 was spiteful. Full of a baby's venom,” (Morrison, 1) is the opening line of Morrison’s Beloved. With this sentence, the reader is immediately put on edge. We are warned that the house that Sethe and Denver live in is not an ordinary home but one that houses an angry child’s spirit. Paul D’s first encounter with the house is equally unsettling; the house instantly casts an angry red glow and anchors Paul’s feet to the ground. It was like "a pool of red and undulating light that locked him where he stood" (Morrison, 8.) Much like the director of a horror movie would, Morrison uses a violent supernatural event to set the somber tone of the book. She uses the imagery of red, a color that is associated with blood, to vividly paint the hatred the dead child’s ghost holds. It is a frightening image that creates a dark mood. The reader is drawn to the story in an almost morbid fashion, we ...

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...resence of Beloved, and the exorcism by the local women were all traumatic events in the main characters lives. Their day to day existence was disturbed by the ghost that tortured them and made them remember Sethe’s past sins.

Mystery and intrigue permeate both Beloved and The Painted Drum in a fascinating way. Analyzing both author’s use of mystical elements we learn more and more about the characters and their development. In both, unexplainable events occur to develop characters and communities. Without these supernatural occurrences, many things would be lacking from the story. The effects are deep, and they allow characters to showcase their true feelings, to set the mood of the novels, and also to draw the reader into the story.

Works Cited
Morrison, Toni. Beloved. 1987. NY: Vintage, 2004.

Erdrich, Louise. The Painted Drum. 2005. NY: HarperCollins, 2006.

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