Performativity And Body Politics: Negotiating Identity in Toni Morrison's Beloved

Authors

  • Wilujeng Asih Purwani Ajeng Universitas Billfath

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59024/ijellacush.v4i2.1651

Keywords:

Female Body, Gender Identity, Gender Performativity, Patriarchal Culture, Trauma of Slavery

Abstract

This study aims to explain the construction of gender identity in Toni Morrison's novel Beloved through Judith Butler's gender performativity theory. This novel tells the story of the traumatic experience of slavery that shapes racial identity as well as the social issues, power relations, and extreme violence depicted within it. This study explains how Sethe and other female characters in the novel Beloved construct and demonstrate their identities through concrete actions as a form of protest against slavery. Based on Judith Butler's performativity approach, identity is not understood through a fixed biological destiny but rather as a repetition of social practices and norms within society. In the novel Beloved, Black women are represented not as a fixed biological essence but as the result of the application of norms in society. In Beloved, the Black female body is depicted as a source of oppression and a space of resistance. The system of slavery in Beloved not only controls the physical body but also women's subjectivity. Sethe's actions in protecting her child in the novel can be read as an attempt to shake up hegemonic maternal norms. The results of this study indicate that Morrison portrays identity as a political construct and always in the process of becoming. The trauma depicted in the novel is a performative mechanism that shapes the characters' subjectivities. Thus, an analysis of gender performativity in Beloved cannot be separated from the intersectional issues of race, history, slavery, and patriarchal culture.

References

Alexandre, S. (2011). From the Same Three: Gender and Iconography in Representations of Violence in Beloved. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 36 (4), 915-940.

Banasavadi, c., & Srinivasalu, M. (2023). The Role of Trauma and Memory in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. Journal of English Language and Literature Studies, 5 (2), 45-53.

Bast, F. (2011). Reading Red: The Troping Trauma in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. Callaloo. 34 (4), 1069-1086.

Bouson, J. B. (2000). Quiet as it’s Kept: Shame, Trauma, and Race in the Novel of Toni Morrison. Default Journal.

Butler, J. (2006). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge.

Cutter, M.J. (2022). When Black Lives Really Do Matter: Subverting Medical Racism Through African-Diasporic Hiling Rituals in Toni Morrison’s Fiction. Multi Etchnic Literature of the U.S., 46 (4), 208-234.

Elliot, M. J. S. (2000). Postcolonial Experience in a Domestic Context: Comodified Subjectivity in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. MELUS, 25 (3-4), 181-202.

Fuston, W. J. (2002). From the Sin to the Told: The Construction of Subjectivity in Tony Morrison’s Belove. African American Review. 36 (3). 461-473.

Gardner, R. L. (2016). Subverting Patriarchy With Vulnerability: Dismanting the Motherhood Mandate in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. Women’s Studies, 45 (3), 203-214

Hefernan, T. (2010). Belived and The Problem of Mourning. American Literature, 82 (1), 75-101.

Henderson, P. (2020). Tangled Roots, a Bloody Forest: Trees, Trauma, and Black Female Bodies in Beloved. African American Review, 53 (3), 217-230.

Koolish, L. (2001). To be Loved and Cry Shame: A Psychological Reading of Toni Morrison’s Beloved. African American Review, 35 (3), 421-433.

Lloyd, M. (2007). Judith Butler: From Norms to Politics. Polity Press

Morgan, J. L. (2004). Partus Squitur Ventrem. Law, Race, and Reproduction in Colonial Slavery. Small Axe. 8 (1). 1-15.

Morrison, T. (2004). Beloved. Vintage International.

Purwani, W.A. (2019). Performativitas dalam Novel The Female Man Karya Joanna Russ. KARANGAN. 01 (02). 110-115.

Rout, R. K., et al. (2004). The Power of Motherhood: Resistance and Survival in Beloved. International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences, 9 (5).

Salih, S. (2002). Judith Butler. Routledge

Schep, D. (2012). The Limits of Performativity: A Critique of Hegemony in Gender Theory. Hypatia A Journal of Feminist Philosophy. 24 (7), 864-880.

Wyatt, J. (2004). Giving Body to the World: The Maternal Symbolic in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. PMLA, 108 (3), 474-488.

Young, E.B. (2000). Disarming the Notion: Woman’s Writing and the American Civil War. American Literature, 72 (1), 59-83.

Downloads

Published

2026-05-30

How to Cite

Wilujeng Asih Purwani Ajeng. (2026). Performativity And Body Politics: Negotiating Identity in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. International Journal of Education, Language, Literature, Arts, Culture, and Social Humanities, 4(2), 51–56. https://doi.org/10.59024/ijellacush.v4i2.1651

Similar Articles

<< < 1 2 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.