The Bluest Eye Essay

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    myth since she does not encounter a renewal but deterioration. While remaining unfocused, Morrison’s music moves from the mourner’s bench to a ‘jook’ joint and then to an uptown club in the city. But her central focus is the Black community. The Bluest Eye presents the fundamental pattern of Morrison’s early novels: an isolated figure, cut off from the community, undergoes a harrowing experience, an ontologically threatening encounter with what is variously described as the unspeakable, the…

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    develop and complete obsession with having blue eyes, eventually destroying her physical and mental health (Kubitschek 40).1 Pecola comes to the conclusion that if she had blue eyes she would no longer be ugly, and her problems would become non-existent (Crayton 68). Eventually, Pecola loses her sanity and truly believes she has blue eyes, at one point stating, “Just because I got blue eyes, bluer than theirs, they’re prejudiced” (Morrison, Bluest 197). Just as Pecola was drastically affected by…

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    I was taken away by the beauty of her craftly word and the deapth of her thought. I promised myself not to stop until I read all of her work. Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye is the first novel, published in 1970. The Nobel laureate’s winner sets a high bar, which she continues to raise with every new literary masterpiece. The Bluest Eye incorporates a lot of characteristics of her future novels, as well as it discusses some of the main Morrison's themes, such as sexism, gender roles, lustful…

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    “Deformed Motherhood in the Bluest Eye” written by Navid Babamiri is a research article that explores and analyzes Toni Morrison use of mothers in the “Bluest Eye”. Babamiri closely looks at the impact that the lack of motherhood has on children. He narrows his focus to the African American family and how “ deformed motherhood” has played a pivotal role in self reflecting process of young girls in society. Mr. Babamiri finds a unique way to connect the lack of a mother's love and nurturance to…

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    In Toni Morrison’s, The Bluest Eye, the author uses point of view as a method to highlight her way of writing. To display a different view of the occurring events throughout the novel, an array of narrators are used. The basic intention of doing this is to give us, as the reader an insight, without denouncing anyone in particular. This technique also allows certain characters, such as Claudia and Pecola, to be much more intensely emphasized. Throughout the narration an accumulation of various…

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    results from a racial society. The general story line of the novel explores and comments on the black-self-hatred. The novel is a complex investigation of the idea of physical beauty among blacks and whites. Nearly all the main characters in The Bluest Eye who are African American are consumed with the constant culturally imposed of white beauty. The Breedlove family for instance, has serious problems with self-esteem. They go through life believing in their ugliness. Most of the black…

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    The overall meaning to the book, The Bluest Eye, is beauty is such an impact that a person will go to the extreme to fit in. For example, Pecola wants to have blue eyes like Shirley Temple, the most beloved little girl in that time. She believes if she does the following that all her problems will fade away and she’ll be the beautiful girl. “ Pecola wishes that she had blue eyes. She thinks that if her eyes were blue, and therefore beautiful according to white American standards, then her…

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    Superiority: Ground Work of Social Justice Barrier Compare to 20th century, our society significantly demolished the barrier of social justice. In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison accentuate the barriers of equal opportunity in our society in the 20th century by using the actual setting and background, which means she primarily focused on the of social justice specifically in the 20th century. After I finished the novel, I searched the definition of social justice on assorted websites, and my own…

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    Tough Love In her book The Bluest Eye, Morrison presents the line between success and failure, drawn by parents’ to their African American children, as a tool used to prepare them for society. The line is depicted through the parents attitudes towards their children. Their mannerisms mimic how society has treated them in the past, moreover, it is a mechanism used to prepare their children for what is to come. Consequently, if the child can’t physically or mentally take it, they fail. If the…

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    The Imitation of Life and The Bluest Eye were two pieces of work that let their audience take a look at the world through the eyes of females in the 1930s. The Imitation of Life debuted in 1934 and was produced by John Stahl. Because it was set and made in a time before the Civil Rights Movement, there were a lot of guidelines that the production crew had to conform to that so the “wrong” message was not being displayed. There was a lot of scandal behind the making of the movies because many…

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