Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye Essay

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    While written over forty years apart, The Bluest Eye and Between the World and Me share a similar storyline of the black body being destroyed by the “white” gaze. In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison chooses to use a single character, Pecola Breedlove, to adeptly depict how one 's body can become a subject of discrimination. After being impregnated by her own father, the entire town ridicules Pecola. She must now face the harsh gaze of an entire town that is convinced that Pecola is the ugliest girl…

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    emotional harm by means of in no way showing any recognize for her as a man or women; he orders her around without ever pronouncing something type to her. “He beat me today purpose he says I winked at a boy in church. I may have got something in my eye however, I did not wink. I don't even appearance” (Walker7) (Tahir…

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    In “Border Crossing in the USA,” Donna Gaines claims that “[t]he concept of adolescence, our assumptions about young people’s preparedness to handle life, and the laws we created to protect them, infantilize youth at a time when they are increasingly called upon to care for themselves” . Nancy Lesko moves Gaines’s quote one step further when she concludes that “Gaines’s emphasis on how the lived realities of youth are in conflict with adult conceptions of them must be demonstrated through…

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    Seeing is Believing Appearance is everything; a common phrase used in marketing, fashion, and even politics because the public believes only what they can see. Aware of this, Toni Morrison considered varying points of views in her novel, The Bluest Eye, which provided a world unknown to most of her readers. By using this strategy, it proved Morrison understands the diversity of her audience, and this element equipped her novel for success. Through Pecola’s perspective, the readers meet three…

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    The Bluest Eye fits into the study of the American novel because it tells the story of a group of Americans, who are descendants of slaves, and live in a society where, despite the fact that numerous individuals deny it, the color of their skin determines who they are and what privileges they are entitled to. This specific novel inspects the impact of a kind of seeing that is refracted through the lens of racism by victims of racism themselves. In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison recounts the story…

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    other African Americans affected by this. Leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. lead the march and helped in ending discrimination against genders and racers, those especially in the minorities category. The Color Purple (Alice Walker) and The Bluest Eye (Toni Morrison) are written by two African American Woman who have had their struggles growing up. The novels tie into the 60’s era, the time of discrimination and history of the civil rights movement and play a major role in advocating both…

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    first being young. We spend our childhoods dealing with the conflict between our internal personal values, and the variety of external values and expectations pushed upon us. Both Gene Luen Yang’s graphic novel American Born Chinese and Toni Morrison's novel The Bluest Eye deal with children and young adults wrestling with their relationships with their own ideals and the unreachable expectations but on them by their parents, and peers, but also the culture as a whole. The tumultuous journey of…

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    The media is control of what a lot of society views as right or wrong, a lot of the issues from this novel come from the wrong ideas people take upon based of the media and the social dynamics that it portrays. According to one of the sections of Melissa Burkley’s article in The Ugly Duckling Effect: Examining Fixed Versus Malleable Beliefs About Beauty, "These things happen through a constant beating of marketing to our society driven by impulses and always having the next big thing. Ultimately…

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    colored meant being hated, so in hopes of being white colored people started to be white. They hated who they were so much that they would rather dye their hair blonde, wear clothes that white actresses wore in shows, and try to change their eyes. In Toni Morrison’s…

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    Dismantling the Importance of a Nuclear Family in Morrison’s Novels The nuclear family constricts and confines while mother figures in Toni Morrison’s novels contrastingly free and empower. Throughout Morrison’s novels, single mothers or motherly figures compensate for the lack of nuclear families, raising their children adequately, but not within society’s preferred ideals. Morrison emphasizes the power of a woman and the power of a mother through her portrayal of motherhood contradicting…

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