Coping and Defense Mechanisms of Intergenerational Trauma of Slavery in Toni Morrison's Beloved (1987)
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
African Americans suffered physical, sexual, emotional, and psychological trauma from
slavery, which has been passed down through generations. In the novel Beloved, Toni
Morrison talks about the trauma of slavery and how it affects both those who directly and
indirectly experienced it. This dissertation analyzes the characters Sethe and Denver in the
novel Beloved by Toni Morrison using Sigmund Freud's theory of psychoanalysis, focusing
on the concept of defense mechanisms. Moreover, the researcher seeks to discover the
defense mechanisms of intergenerational trauma of slavery. Additionally, this dissertation
uses qualitative methods of research to achieve its aim. This dissertation concludes that
Sethe used denial, repression, and dissociation, and Denver used avoidance, regression, and
dissociation, and these defense mechanisms are defense mechanisms of the
intergenerational trauma of slavery because Denver indirectly experienced the trauma of
slavery and inherited it from her mother Sethe, and Sethe was transmitted the trauma and
directly experienced it as well
