Sunday, April 12, 2015

Beloved Unchained

Beloved Unchained
by Rebekah Canfield


Beloved by Toni Morrison and Django Unchained, directed by Quentin Tarantino, are very different in terms of their tone and approach to the topic of slavery. While the former is very literal and truth-based, the latter relies heavily on hyperbole to carry its plot.

Each time Paul D or Sethe or any former slave character in Beloved recounts an experience pre-freedom, the raw honesty of the dialogue is what makes the reader cringe in the realization that these things happened. That our country was once this place which Sethe and the other characters describe. Beloved does an incredible job of bringing to light the nonfiction parts of its plot though it is a work of fiction.

On the contrary, Quentin Tarantino approaches the still very delicate and sensitive subject of slavery not with tact but instead by slamming it with hyperbole after hyperbole. Without regard to timeline or historic accuracy, Tarantino creates Django’s heroism as the central focus of the film because that is what Americans want in a film about slavery. The KKK are a bunch of blinded idiots who are quick tempered and easily fooled, the central plantation is quite literally a palace- filled to the brim with velvet and gold, the amount of blood that appears in the film is blown wildly out of proportion, and Django is immediately (and impossibly) an expert marksman seeing as he had never been handed a gun in his life before he became freed. Each of these details aids Tarantino in his end goal with the film which is clearly to depict Django’s final annihilation of the inhabitants of Candyland in as grand and heroic a light as possible.

While these two sources are vastly contrasted in their tone as well as their purpose, they share the topic of slavery, so inarguably they are tied. In his article Tarantino Unchained for The New Yorker, Jelani Cobb points out that “Oppression, almost by definition, is a set of circumstances that bring out the worst in most people”. This is a truth that Jelani notices in Django Unchained and is also true for the characters of Beloved. The oppression of slavery is exemplified countless times in the novel by Morrison- when Halle witnesses the unthinkable act his wife endured (a product of slavery), he loses his sanity. When Sixo is caught and is being negotiated for a price, the strong, level-headed man gives up in the form of incessant song and laughter. When Paul D is at his lowest point of humiliation, he realizes that he has been completely dehumanized and is in a sense no longer a person but an animal. Lower, even. Baby Suggs years and years of oppression catch up with her at the end of her life and all she can manage is to long for color and await death. In the most horrifying example, Sethe’s worst quality shows itself in the face of oppression when she turns into a murderess- and of her own child. The same truth is evidenced in Django Unchained, as claimed by Jelani Cobb. The author points out that “Here, as in “Lincoln,” black people—with the exception of the protagonist and his love interest—are ciphers passively awaiting freedom.” Oppression has caused these slaves to become (regardless of accuracy) ragdolls. They are essentially lifeless, as they have no hope for the future nor any saving grace to cling to. On the other end of the spectrum, Django, who has been freed, uses his memories of oppression to channel into a massive aggression which results in his turning into a mass murderer.

So it goes.