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  1. Quick answer: In *Beloved*, "re-memory" refers to the process of repeatedly returning to past memories, which significantly influence a person's present. Sethe's vivid...

  2. Sethe’s term for this kind of powerful memory is “rememory”, a word that she uses to describe memories that affect not only the person who remembers the past, but others as well. One of the ways in which memories live on is through storytelling.

  3. Mar 3, 2018 · Morrison creates a new word in Beloved: rememory. The way she uses it, rememory seems to be a noun rather than a verb. So my question is, what’s the difference between rememory and memory? In a...

  4. Jan 21, 2014 · “Rememory” addresses the recollection of the things that a person has forgotten and, as Freud puts it, repressed. Multiple times throughout Beloved, Sethe’s mind recalls moments from her past.

  5. Jun 29, 2018 · Rememory, a concept rooted in the gothic element of the supernatural that exists solely between the pages of Toni Morrison’s Beloved, serves as a means to recount and pass on the traumatic events that occurred as a result of slavery.

  6. Sethe’s idea of “rememory” encapsulates how the past continues to affect the characters in the novel. It is not just something from the past—it is something that continues to recur. One person’s “rememory” can affect not only that person, but other people as well, as exemplified by the ghost of Sethe’s baby.

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  8. In her novel Beloved, Toni Morrison carefully constructs events that parallel the way the human mind functions; this serves as a means by which the reader can understand the activity of memory. "Rememory" enables Sethe, the novel's protagonist, to reconstruct her past realities.