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The purpose of this study is to conduct various discussions on violence, imitation, revenge, tolerance, and self-sacrifice in Toni Morrison"s Song of Solomon. Morrison raises issues of oppression and exploitation by describing the damage suffered by black people exposed to white violence. Black people who experience or witness the violence of white people show various aspects such as reproduction of violence through imitation, material greed, and maintenance of black identity and practice of self-sacrifice. The violence suffered by white people being indiscriminately applied to innocent people in the name of revenge is a problem that can expand beyond the conflict between black and white to become a human problem. Morrison suggests the need for mutual communication, understanding, and self-sacrifice rather than imitation and repetition of violence for the harmony of the human community.
Jun-soo Kang (Fri,) studied this question.