Thursday, March 21, 2019
Comparing the Role of the Ghost in Morrisons Beloved and Kingstons No
The Symbolic Role of the Ghost in Morrisons Beloved and Kingstons No be Woman The eponymous tones which haunt Toni Morrisons Beloved and Maxine Hong Kingstons No expose Woman (excerpted from The Woman Warrior) embody the consequence of transgressing societal boundaries through adultery and murder. While the wider thematic concerns of both books differ, however both authors use the signature figure to represent a repressed historical past that is waken in their narrative retelling of the stories. The ghosts facilitate this retelling of stories that give voice to that which has been silenced, challenging this repression and at last reversing it. The patriarchal repression of Chinese women is illustrated by Kingstons story of No Name Woman, whose illicit pregnancy is punished when the villagers raid the family home. Cast out by her down(p) family, she births the baby and then drowns herself and her child. Her family exile her from memory by acting as if she had never been born (3) -- indeed, when the narrators mother tells the story, she prefaces it with a strict injunction to concealing so as not to upset the narrators father, who denies her (3). By denying No Name Woman a name and place in history, leaving her forever hungry, (16) the patriarchy exerts the ultimate repression in its attempt to banish the transgressor from history. Yet her ghost continues to exist in a liminal space, remaining on the fringes of memory as a cautionary tale passed down by women, but is denied full phase of the moon existence by the men who do not want to control her name (15). Kingstons narrator tackles this repression when she sympathetically frames No Name Womans story as one of subjugation, pointing out that women in the old Ch... ... The Woman Warrior as a Search for Ghosts, Sato examines Kingstons symbolic use of the ghost figure as a means of approaching the dramatic structure of the text and appreciating its thematic attend for identity amidst an often-parado xical bicultural setting. Sonser makes this argument through a comparison of Beloved with Nathaniel Hawthornes The blood-red Letter. Her essay, The Ghost in the Machine Beloved and The Scarlet Letter, draws inviolable parallels between the two female protagonists, Sethe and Hester, who challenge the oppressive frameworks of their societies. Despite the ideological incongruity of Hawthornes patriarchal Puritanism and Morrisons racist slavery, Sonser still finds a shared thematic intersection of subjectivity and social power (17) that resonates in the stories of two womens attempts at self-definition from the margins of society.
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