All posts by Imran

Glossary Write-Up

  1. Disdainful
  2. Jalousies
  3. Ocular
  4. Revulsion
  5. Skulk
  6. Undulating
  7. Salsify
  8. Buckboard
  9. Lisle
  10. Indolent
  11. Spry
  12. Spigot
  13. Aspen
  14. Shoat
  15. Cajole

In completing the glossary assignment I have learned many new words that I have never heard or knew the meaning of before. While reading the texts this semester, there were numerous words that I did not know the meaning of. When I come across a word I did not know while reading, I would assume what those words meant with the use of context clues to understand their meanings. Sometimes I had no idea what the word meant and had to look it up after I finished reading. This assignment has helped me understand the definitions of new words and in some passages it helped me understand what was going on.  Before this assignment, I would have usually skipped an unknown word. I have benefited from actually taking the time to find the definitions of these words and plan to continue this process in the future.

Cover Letter For Project 2

In completing this project there were a few challenges. In Part 1, I found it difficult to decide which scene to base my essay on. Not that it was difficult finding one, but it was difficult choosing one. There were multiple scenes that I believed were significant in the book. In this project I am mostly proud of the creative work from Part 2. Deciding another way to portray that scene was another difficulty. I originally wanted to create a poem and create concrete poetry with it, but it was challenging to get the lines of the poem in a meaningful shape. This was when I decided to just use a passage from the story in a concrete poetry shape.  This was an interesting way to take the gloomy scene of Sethe killing her child and putting it into another medium. A new skill that I have required in completing this project was the use of concrete poetry. Before this assignment, I had never heard of this technique. I felt that it was an interesting and powerful way to display text. Another skill is incorporating a quote into an essay using the five step method. I am truly pleased that Professor Rosen has introduced this to us. This method was a really great way to not only help the reader of my essay understand the quote, but helped me perceive it in a better way also. This was an interesting project, especially the creative part, which I enjoyed completing.

Sethe’s Hand

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I have created a concrete poetry image to represent the scene that I have chosen for part one, which I believe was a central scene in the book. This scene was when Sethe killed her two year old child. This image was created on a website (imagechef.com). I chose the shape of a hand with the words wrapped around it. The hand is meant to represent Sethe’s hand. My intention in wrapping the words around the hand was to represent the pain that surrounded Sethe after she had killed her child. The color for the hand, red, represents the blood of the child in Sethe’s hand. The text around the hand is the text from the scene. After the horsemen came to claim her and her children to take back to Sweet Home, Sethe believed the only way to save them was to kill them all.  She did not want her children to die as slaves, at the hands of another. She wanted them to die from her hands, while they were still free. In choosing this shape for the text, I believe it shows the significance of Sethe’s hands in the story, which was used to kill her child and the importance of this scene in the book.

Her Child

In “Beloved,” by Toni Morrison, one significant event that occurred was Sethe killing her baby daughter. This is a central event within the story because its action is what held the story together. Many of the following events were a result of that action. Sethe killing her two year old daughter was an important scene in the book because it displayed her love for her children, its action lead to 124 being haunted by the child ghost, it caused the child to return in the form of Beloved, and it helped with the development of Denver’s character. If Sethe had never proceeded with killing her child, many events in the book would not have occurred.

Shortly after escaping Sweet Home, the four horsemen, schoolteacher, one of his nephews, a slave catcher, and a sheriff, came to claim Sethe along with her children. Sethe quickly ran to the shed where she planned to kill her children to protect them, but only succeeded in killing one. Once the horsemen witnessed what she has done they thought, “Right off it was clear, to schoolteacher especially, that there was nothing there to claim. The three (now four—because she’d had the one coming when she cut) pickaninnies they had hoped were alive and well enough to take back to Kentucky, take back and raise properly to do the work Sweet Home desperately needed, were not (Morrison 175).” The horsemen, especially schoolteacher, came to realize that their trip had been in vein. They thought they would have claimed more slaves, but from what they have seen, Sethe was not well enough to take back to Sweet Home. This quote signifies that the schoolteacher desperately needed slaves for Sweet Home who were alive and well, but after Sethe’s actions he felt that there was nothing for him to claim there.

Sethe killing her child showed her love for her, and for the rest of her children. If she had never done what she did, schoolteacher would have taken them all back to Sweet Home. Sethe so desperately wanted to protect her children from the life that she grew up in, which is why she killed her daughter. It was the only way she could have protected her.

From the time that Beloved spent with Sethe and Denver, Sethe comes to realize that she is her daughter and wants to explain why she killed her. Sethe thinks, “How if I hadn’t killed her she would have died and that is something I could not bear to happen to her
 I’ll tend her as no mother ever tended a child, a daughter. Nobody will ever get my milk no more except my own children (Morrison 236).” In other words, if Sethe had not killed her child she would have died a slave, and Sethe could not bear to see that. Now that her daughter is back she gets another chance to redeem herself by tending her daughter like no mother ever tended a child. Also, she declares that nobody, but her children will ever get her milk. This quotation shows that Sethe killing her child protected her from being captured by schoolteacher and taken to Sweet Home. Sethe’s love for her child is displayed in this quote. Killing her child allowed her this opportunity.

Resulting in the death of Sethe’s child, 124 was haunted by the ghost of it. It often shook the house and threw things around. The ghost that haunted 124 was an effect of Sethe killing her child. If Sethe had not killed her, the house would not have been haunted. The ghost caused Sethe’s sons, Howard and Buglar, to run away. No one visited 124, leaving Denver in isolation from other people. She had no company other than the ghost of her sister.

Denver comes to acknowledge that Beloved is her sister. She was the one who haunted 124, and kept Denver company. Denver thinks, “Beloved is my sister. I swallowed her blood right along with my mother’s milk. The first thing I heard after not hearing anything was the sound of her crawling up the stairs. She was my secret company until Paul D came. He threw her out. Ever since I was little she was my company and she helped me wait for my daddy (Morrison 243).” Denver knew that Beloved was her sister. She knew that her sister was the ghost that haunted 124, and kept her company secretly over the years. Denver believed that her father was coming to get her, and her sister waited with her. This secret relationship that Denver had with her sister was due to the fact that her sister was the ghost that haunted the house.

Sethe grew more and more attached to Beloved. She began to arrive to work late and even miss days just to stay home to spend time with her daughter that she once lost. Eventually, Sethe lost her job and could barely feed her children or herself. As Denver sees what the return of her sister is doing to her mother, she left 124 to seek work. The return of Beloved had contributed to the development of Denver’s character. She was once reluctant to step outside the walls of her house, but then willingly does so to seek help. Sethe killing her child contributed to the cause of this. The return of the dead child allowed Denver to mature and leave her home, just as her brothers.

The death of Sethe’s child is a central event in the story. This event leads to 124 being haunted by the ghost of the child, Beloved’s character coming into the story contributing to the development of Denver’s character, and most importantly this event showed Sethe’s love for her children. If Sethe had never killed her child the story would have been completely different.

Works Cited

Morrison, Toni. Beloved. New York: Vintage, 1987. Print.

Project # 2 – Part 2 – Draft

 

Sethe's Hand

I have created a concrete poetry image with the scene that I have chosen for part one, which was Sethe killing her child. I chose the shape of a hand with the words wrapped around it. The text around the hand is the text from the scene. The hand represents Sethe’s hand. After the horsemen came to claim her and her children to take back to Sweet Home, she believed the only way to save them was to kill them all.  Sethe did not want her children to die as slaves, at the hands of another. She wanted them to die from her hands, while they were still free. In choosing this shape for the text, I believe it shows the significance of Sethe’s hands in the story, which was used to kill her child.

Project 2 (Part 1) – Draft

In “Beloved,” by Toni Morrison, one significant event that occurred was Sethe killing her baby daughter. This is a central event within the story because its action is what held the story together. Many of the following events were a result of that action. Sethe killing her two year old daughter was an important scene in the book because it displayed her love for her children, its action lead to 124 being haunted by the child ghost, and it helped with the development of Beloved’s character along with others.

Shortly after escaping Sweet Home, the four horsemen, schoolteacher, one of his nephews, a slave catcher, and a sheriff, came to claim Sethe along with her children. Sethe quickly ran to the shed where she planned to kill her children to protect them, but only succeeded in killing one. Once the horsemen witnessed what she has done they thought, “Right off it was clear, to schoolteacher especially, that there was nothing there to claim. The three (now four—because she’d had the one coming when she cut) pickaninnies they had hoped were alive and well enough to take back to Kentucky, take back and raise properly to do the work Sweet Home desperately needed, were not (Morrison 175).” The horsemen, especially schoolteacher, came to realize that their trip had been in vein. They thought they would’ve claimed more slaves, but from what they’ve seen, Sethe was not well enough to take back to Sweet Home. This quote signifies that the schoolteacher desperately needed slaves for Sweet Home who were alive and well, but after Sethe’s actions he felt that there was nothing for him to claim there. Sethe killing her child showed her love for her, and for the rest of her children. If she had never done what she did, schoolteacher would’ve taken them all back to Sweet Home. Sethe so desperately wanted to protect her children from the life that she grew up in, which is why she killed her daughter. It was the only way she could’ve protected her.

Resulting in the death of Sethe’s child, 124 was haunted by the ghost of it. It often shook the house and threw things around. When Paul D arrived and acknowledged the ghost, he chases it off. ”
‘Leave the place alone! Get the hell out!’ A table rushed toward him and he grabbed its leg. Somehow he managed to stand at an angle and, holding the table by two legs, he bashed it about, wrecking everything, screaming back at the screaming house. ‘You want to fight, come on! God damn it! She got enough without you. She got enough!’ The quaking slowed to an occasional lurch, but Paul D did not stop whipping the table around until everything was rock quiet (Morrison 22).” Paul D shouts at the ghost after it started to shake the house. He demands it to leave the house and Sethe alone because she’s got enough problems without it. As he swings the table, the shaking of the house slows down, and eventually stops. This quote shows the ghost of Sethe’s child who shakes the house, maybe because of its anger towards Sethe or Paul D. The ghost that haunts 124 is an effect of Sethe killing her child. If Sethe hadn’t killed her, the house wouldn’t have been haunted.

Denver was a lonely child who had no company, except the ghost inside 124. She thinks, “Beloved is my sister. I swallowed her blood right along with my mother’s milk. The first thing I heard after not hearing anything was the sound of her crawling up the stairs. She was my secret company until Paul D came. He threw her out. Ever since I was little she was my company and she helped me wait for my daddy (Morrison 243).” Denver knew that Beloved was her sister. She knew that her sister was the ghost that haunted 124, and kept her company secretly over the years. Denver believed that her father was coming to get her, and her sister waited with her. This secret relationship that Denver had with her sister was due to the fact that her sister was the ghost that haunted the house.

From the time that Beloved spent with Sethe and Denver, Sethe comes to realize that she is her daughter and wants to explain why she killed her. Sethe thinks, “How if I hadn’t killed her she would have died and that is something I could not bear to happen to her
 I’ll tend her as no mother ever tended a child, a daughter. Nobody will ever get my milk no more except my own children (Morrison 236).” In other words, if Sethe had not killed her child she would’ve died a slave, and Sethe couldn’t bear to see that. Now that her daughter is back she gets another chance to redeem herself by tending her daughter like no mother ever tended a child. Also, she declares that nobody, but her children will ever get her milk. This quotation shows that Sethe killing her child protected her from being captured by schoolteacher and taken to Sweet Home. Sethe’s love for her child is displayed in this quote. Killing her child allowed her this opportunity.

After Sethe lost her job, and she couldn’t feed her children or herself anymore, Denver decided to leave the house to work. Once Ella heard about Sethe being whipped being whipped by Beloved and Denver sought help she thought, “The daughter, however, appeared to have some sense after all. At least [Denver] had stepped out the door, asked for the help she needed and wanted work (Morrison 302).” As Denver realized she needed to get out of 124, to get help to save her family, she stepped out the door seeking it. Her character has developed significantly since the arrival of Beloved. She was once intimidated to leave her house, but is now willing to do so. The cause of Denver’s ability to step out the door of 124 was because of how Beloved has changed since her first arrival. The death of Sethe’s child, allowed Beloved to come into the story, and allowed Denver mature.

The death of Sethe’s child is a central scene in the story. If it had never happened, the story would’ve been different. This also contributed to many other events throughout the book.

Works Cited

Morrison, Toni. Beloved. New York: Vintage, 1987. Print.

Five-Step Method

As Sethe comes to realize that Beloved is her daughter, she wants to explain why she killed her. Sethe thinks, “How if I hadn’t killed her she would have died and that is something I could not bear to happen to her.” In other words, if Sethe had not killed her child she would’ve died  a slave, ad Sethe couldn’t bear to see that. This quotation shows that Sethe killing her child protected her from being captured by schoolteacher and taken to Sweet Home. Sethe’s love for her child is displayed in this quote. Killing her child was the only way to protect her from becoming a slave.

Pivotal Scene in “Beloved”

One scene that I found to be pivotal was Sethe killing her child. In my opinion, this is what held the book together. The reason behind Sethe’s murder was a good intention. She wanted to protect her children and herself from schoolteacher and the rest of the men. She feared they would’ve taken her along with her children back to the slave life she didn’t want her kids to experience. This action actually showed the amount of love she had for her children.

“I didn’t have time to explain before because it had to be done quick. Quick. She had to be safe and I put her where she would be. But my love was tough and she back now.”

“How if I hadn’t killed her she would have died and that is something I could not bear to happen to her. When I explain it she’ll understand, because she understands everything already. I’ll tend her as no mother ever tended a child, a daughter. Nobody will ever get my milk no more except my own children.”

After Sethe comes to realize that Beloved is her daughter, she wanted to explain to Beloved why she killed her. She knew that her daughter would’ve died anyway at the hands of someone else, and couldn’t handle the sight of that. Now that she has her daughter back, she wants to make up for those lost years. Sethe claims that nobody except her children will ever get her milk. All of this shows the amount of love she has for her children, which is why she ended up killing her daughter.

Also, the baby ghost that haunted 124 would not have been there if Sethe hadn’t killed her daughter. This caused Sethe and Denver to live in isolation because no one visited them. The years of isolation kept Denver inside of 124, until she was forced to get out after her mother lost her job.

Cajole

Cajole (verb) – to persuade someone to do something or to give you something by making promises or saying nice things.

This was found in “Beloved,” on page 295, in the first line of the second paragraph. “Washing, cooking, forcing, cajoling her mother to eat a little now and then, providing sweet things for Beloved as often as she could to calm her down.”

Denver tried to persuade her mother to eat.