Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home

Toni Morrison’s project of reimagining individual memories of the African American past has been immortalized by the image of the chokecherry tree of scar tissue on Sethe’s back in Beloved. Invisible and dumb for Sethe, the scars have to be faced and interpreted with the help of others in order to p...

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Main Author: Ágnes Zsófia Kovács
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca 2021-07-01
Series:Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.metacriticjournal.com/article/187/body-marks-of-the-past-in-toni-morrisons-a-mercy-and-home
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spelling doaj-0aa12703e6094a74ac46bffd66c254ff2021-07-17T06:24:50ZengBabes-Bolyai University, Cluj-NapocaMetacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory2457-88272021-07-0171160176https://doi.org/10.24193/mjcst.2021.11.10Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and HomeÁgnes Zsófia Kovács0Szeged UniversityToni Morrison’s project of reimagining individual memories of the African American past has been immortalized by the image of the chokecherry tree of scar tissue on Sethe’s back in Beloved. Invisible and dumb for Sethe, the scars have to be faced and interpreted with the help of others in order to process traumatic memories of the slave past. The image questions a presumed opposition between objects of memory as separate from subjects of memory, as the wound, the supposed object is located in the body of the subject, Sethe. Body marks of the past also appear in Morrison’s novels after 2003, which are generally considered sparse compared to her previous texts. Relying on Marianne Hirsch’s method of reading how body marks create a “sense memory” of traumatic experience, the paper explores the webs of meaning invoked by bodily wounds and other extended objects of memory in Morrison’s late novels. The paper claims that although these novels continue to rely on the representation and processing of sense memories, they represent a truncated version compared to earlier novels, in which wounds figure not so much as metaphoric nodes of interaction, but rather as themes.https://www.metacriticjournal.com/article/187/body-marks-of-the-past-in-toni-morrisons-a-mercy-and-hometoni morrisonmarianne hirschobjects of memorysense memorybody marksprocessing the racial past
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ágnes Zsófia Kovács
spellingShingle Ágnes Zsófia Kovács
Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
toni morrison
marianne hirsch
objects of memory
sense memory
body marks
processing the racial past
author_facet Ágnes Zsófia Kovács
author_sort Ágnes Zsófia Kovács
title Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
title_short Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
title_full Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
title_fullStr Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
title_full_unstemmed Body Marks of the Past in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home
title_sort body marks of the past in toni morrison’s a mercy and home
publisher Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca
series Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
issn 2457-8827
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Toni Morrison’s project of reimagining individual memories of the African American past has been immortalized by the image of the chokecherry tree of scar tissue on Sethe’s back in Beloved. Invisible and dumb for Sethe, the scars have to be faced and interpreted with the help of others in order to process traumatic memories of the slave past. The image questions a presumed opposition between objects of memory as separate from subjects of memory, as the wound, the supposed object is located in the body of the subject, Sethe. Body marks of the past also appear in Morrison’s novels after 2003, which are generally considered sparse compared to her previous texts. Relying on Marianne Hirsch’s method of reading how body marks create a “sense memory” of traumatic experience, the paper explores the webs of meaning invoked by bodily wounds and other extended objects of memory in Morrison’s late novels. The paper claims that although these novels continue to rely on the representation and processing of sense memories, they represent a truncated version compared to earlier novels, in which wounds figure not so much as metaphoric nodes of interaction, but rather as themes.
topic toni morrison
marianne hirsch
objects of memory
sense memory
body marks
processing the racial past
url https://www.metacriticjournal.com/article/187/body-marks-of-the-past-in-toni-morrisons-a-mercy-and-home
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