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Theatres of memory
It is not dreams of liberated grand children which stir men and
women to revolt, but memories of enslaved ancestors.
Walter Benjamin: Illuminations
As a writer on the Afro-American question, the Nobel-Prize
winning novelist Toni Morrison has no equal today. She probably
has, in fact, no real competitors. The literary role she has
taken on so deliberately is, first and last, political; or, as
she said "it seems to me that the best art is political and you
ought to make it unquestionably political and irrevocably
beautiful at the same time." And she does it best in Beloved,
which is perhaps the most important text to have emerged out of
the Afro-American literary tradition, on par with Ralph Ellison's
Invisible Man and Richard Wright's Native Son. Morrison comes off
as the Afro-American in extremis, a virtuoso of ethnic suffering,
defiance and aspiration. Her role is that of a spokesperson for
her people whose complexions constituted their fate, not only in
a society poisoned by prejudice for centuries, but also it seems,
in general. For, she appears to have received a heavy dose of
existentialism; she is at least more than half-inclined to see
the Afro-American question in the era of slavery in the 19th
Century in the light of the Human Condition. So, she brings into
the novel through an imaginative sweep, a wider and universal
vision in which questions of slavery, race, gender, the dilemmas
of historical memory and the "politics of reading" are
compellingly posed.
Beloved begins: "124 was spiteful". 124 is a house in Cincinnati
in 1873 inhabited by Sethe, a runaway slave from the horribly
named "Sweet Home" Kentucky farm, and her daughter, Denver. The
house is "spiteful" because it is haunted by the terrible fury of
a daughter whose throat was cut to make her safe from
repossession after the infamous Fugitive Slave Act. (The Fugitive
Slave Act that was passed in 1850 mandated the return of runaway
slaves regardless of where they were in the Union at the time of
their discovery. This legislation was one of the series of events
that culminated in the American Civil War.)
Before the Civil War, a group - a family in a sense - of slaves
live more or less contentedly under a fairly enlightened rule of
reasonably humane masters, the Garners. Mr. Garner moves around
with his field hands, consults them on various matters, and
treats them as human beings, not implements. Mrs. Garner manages
the female house servants kindly and helps them with what they do
not know. Still, institutional, if not personal inhumanity,
remains. "Sweet Home" had its flaws: "It wasn't sweet and it sure
wasn't home" as one of the inmates recalled. But Sethe's response
to this witticism - "But it's where we were. All together. Comes
back whether we like it or not," states the need for connection
with the past that the novel dwells on.
"Sweet Home" falls apart in the 1850s when Garner dies and the
farm is taken over by a sadist, called the school teacher by the
slaves - he was great for measuring heads (the size of the head
was taken as an index for intelligence!) - whose brutality to his
human livestock drives them to attempt mass escape. Sethe manages
to smuggle her three young children across the Ohio to Baby
Snuggs, her mother-in-law, and after giving birth to her
daughter, Denver, in the fields, finally gets there herself. But
the men are killed, tortured, imprisoned, scattered by their bid
for freedom.
This is the novel's background told in flashes. Now it is 1873,
the Civil War is over, slavery has been officially abolished,
Sethe lives in Baby Snuggs' house outside Cincinnati where she
cooks in a restaurant; Baby Snuggs is herself dead, as is Sethe's
older daughter; her sons have run away in early adolescence,
never to be heard again. She lives in seclusion with her
daughter, Denver, who is a bit of a loner and fears to leave home
alone. Sethe and Denver are avoided by the neighbours because the
house is haunted by the troubled violent spirit of the daughter
who died, known only as Beloved from the pathetically brief
inscription on the tombstone.
The emergence of the spirit of Beloved who stands at the
enigmatic centre of the novel makes it a kind of a ghost story
about slavery. But we need to accept the ghost in the same way as
the solidly realistic figures in the story if we want to get to
the underlying subtext of the novel. And so it is necessary to
stand back a bit. Black experience in America originates in
slavery, which is to say that it begins with the behaviour of the
white people. The whites in the book - the people without skin,
as Beloved calls them - are good, bad or indifferent but that is
not relevant. For many Afro-Americans, the issue is not so much
what exactly they suffered from racism but how they could survive
it. And survival points to the heart of the novel, the question
of memory.
Sethe's "serious work," she reflects as she is kneading bread in
the restaurant, is "beating back the past." Like all of us, there
are moments she would rather forget, if only to move on and see
"it" through. But the past is always with us; it is never quite
past. Besides, it is only when she looks unflinchingly into the
past that she can tell us what slavery does to men, how
dreadfully it wounds, what for better or worse, defines the
manhood that men cherish - physical capacity, pride of dominance,
freedom of will and action. And she knows from her own experience
that it can do something subtler and perhaps worse to women,
something that here centres on the figure of her mother-in-law,
Baby Snuggs who is dead now but an abiding influence on her
daughter-in-law and her grand daughter, Denver. Baby knew what
life in the world was like, that "being alive was the hardest
part," as Sethe says later; she knew that the worst horrors of
slavery were small and specific, like not seeing your children
growing up - as seven of her children from different fathers died
or were sold away before maturity. So her mother-in-law says that
it is better that the past be accepted than fought against:
"Lay'em down, Sethe, Sword and shield. Both of 'em down. Down by
the riverside. Don't study war no more. Lay all that mess down."
Or, more tersely, "Good is knowing when to stop."
Baby Snuggs, who has had a history of suffering, knew that in the
final analysis, all suffering involved a question of choice, not
just between one person and another, or between one thing and
another but between two conflicting ideas in the mind of a single
person. And the choice was always so hideous, so degrading that
it further diminished the humanity of those who made it. To live
was to become less human.
So her simple gospel was love, but not a kind that orthodox
religion has much to say about:
Yonder they do not love your flesh. They despise it. They don't
love your eyes; they just as soon pick'em out. No more do they
love the skin on your back. Yonder they flay it. Love your hands!
Love them. Raise them up and kiss them. You have got to love it,
you. No, they don't love your mouth. You got to love it. This is
flesh I am talking about here. Flesh that needs to be loved...And
all your inside parts that they'd just as soon slop for hogs, you
got to love them. The dark, dark liver - love it, and the beat
and beating heart, too. More than eyes or feet. More than lungs
that have yet to draw free air..Love your heart. For this is the
prize.
Very simply, stand up, be yourself. Baby's doctrine of the body
as the seat of love and grace makes Sethe see that she herself,
not Beloved, may be her "own best thing." But being yourself
means coming to terms with your memory, and memory isolated from
immediate life can be terribly dangerous. It feeds on guilt and
self-loathing and hatred of others to batten on themselves.
But Beloved is all memory - Sethe's seems to be a collective
racial memory whose "personal" contents mingle with recollections
of the passage of slave ships from Africa. The memory - personal,
political and poetical - of a social horror of such magnitude may
distort day-to-day living; but living pursued without regard for
such memories is pretty sure to be trivial and empty. History
matters; stories matter.
What Morrison does with Beloved's story and the stories within
the stories, is to tell her people, especially women - the book
is dedicated to "sixty million and more" - to create or re-create
an imagination of self that "white history" or "male history" has
denied them, even while showing them how easily such an
imagination can become self-defeating.
RAVI VYAS
Beloved,Toni Morrison, First published 1988, Plume paperback,
œ6.99.
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