Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye Essay

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    Bluest Eye Essay Vincent K. The novel,Bluest Eye written by Toni Morrison describes the story of Pecola, a quiet,passive girl that is told numerous times that she is hideous that suffers from racial harassment. Her family does not help her through the horrible events. In fact her father,Cholly rapes her abuses her consistently.…

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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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    Upon further review, the “biracial” aspect of a person is considered a part of “beauty” standards in a way. Despite there being only two biracial citizens in The Bluest Eye, they are seen as beautiful compared to other African-Americans. Despite being a man Frieda and Claudia have to steer clear from, Soaphead Church is a biracial character whose ancestry he is proud of despite the fact that it is a high probability that their White ancestor – Sir Whitcomb – raped a slave. In fact, his family is…

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    Morrison has made a constant effort to bring to the consciousness of her readers the history of black slaves in America. Her texts The Bluest Eye and Beloved vivdly portray this. Rushdy asserts to this thus: ‘Beloved is the product of and a contribution to a historical moment in which African American historiography is in a state of fervid revision’ (44-5). In a bid to bring these experiences to the consciousness of her readers, Morrison traces Beloved to the story of Margaret Garner, a slave…

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    a short story about a black girl who longed to have blue eyes. In contemporary woman novelists of America, Toni Morrison is the rare one who thinks highly of nature in her works. Natural imagery in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye compares women destiny with nature, and uncovers the double pressures from white culture and men suffered by Negro women, criticizing ruling logic which gives oppression to Negro women and nature. In The Bluest Eye, Morrison offers a profound critique of codified and…

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    appearance. They don 't feel that they are as beautiful as the women on TV and magazines. The media is mentally brainwashing American females that they are not thin enough, or have blonde hair and blue eyes. This causes women to have hatred against the perfect ideal females. In Toni Morrison 's novel The Bluest Eye two of her fundamental characters, Claudia and Pecola show hate toward others, and themselves since they are not as beautiful as the superior females. “It had begun with Christmas and…

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    Throughout Toni Morrison's novel The Bluest Eye, she conveys an intense insight on the reality of the effects of white beauty on the black community. The idea that Eurocentric features are the epitome of beauty thrive vigorously. This idea distorts the lives of many black women and children and harshly convinces them to believe that whiteness is superior.The novel focuses on the life of a young black girl named Pecola Breedlove who is struggling with racial insecurities and the obsessive want…

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    Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye: Racism and Self Worth Ever since the beginning of American history, race has played a role on how people view themselves, whites being the higher value versus blacks. In Toni Morrison’s novel, The Bluest Eye, Morrison unveils the values of the social community and how white standards affect how African-Americans value themselves. The life of Pecola Breedlove depicts how the social pedestal can make a 12 year old black girl feel unloved, and ultimately corrupt her…

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    Throughout The Bluest Eye, “Adults, older girls, shops, magazines, newspapers, window signs—all the world had agreed that a blue-eyed, yellow-haired, pink-skinned doll was what every girl child treasured” (page 20). The characters live in an the mid-1900s where only girls with blonde-hair, blue-eyes, and white skin are considered beautiful. Throughout The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison explains that beauty is on the inside. In the novel, the influence of popular media is unveiled through the effect…

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    beautiful? In the novel, “The Bluest eye” written by Toni Morrison, she pens, “Beauty was not simply something to behold: it was something one could do” In other words, Morrison wanted to inform us that beauty is not what the media show us or some special characteristics or facial that distinctly make one superior to others. She wanted to stress that one does truly achieve true beauty until they appreciate and like who they are. In laymen terms “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder” Racism is…

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