The Time That is Not Time: Slavery, Repetition, and the Unclaimed Experience in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64002/qd0qqa52الكلمات المفتاحية:
Beloved، Trauma، unclaimed experienceالملخص
To highlight Toni Morrison's novel Beloved (1987), this paper adapts Cathy Caruth's psychoanalytically inflected trauma theory. Accordingly, the researcher contends that the playwright's employment of fragmented language, the storytelling and thematic structures of the novel, and the nostalgia for the cruel past act as a literary manifestation of the horrible experience as enunciated by Caruth. Take Caruth’s notion of the "unclaimed experience,” which suggests that trauma constantly happens in the future, into consideration, the analysis vividly reveals how the character of Beloved portrays the compulsive repetition of the psychological impact resulting from slavery. The theoretical section reveals Caruth's purpose to uncover the moot point between fright and fear and the aftermath consequences. In the same vein, she struggles to explain the negative impact of slavery on the psyche's "protective shield." Polemical reading of the novel and sheds light on its characters represented by Sethe, Paul D, and Denver, the current research shows how Morrison’s narrative compels the reader into the ethical standpoint of a witness, forcing a battle with a history that "arises where immediate understanding may not". The discussion further incorporates the opinions of other prominent trauma theorists, such as Dominick LaCapra, to emphasize the novel's crucial function in expressing the paradox of historical and trans-generational trauma and the need for group work to survive.