Toni Morrison

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    Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye explains the idea of racial self-loathing through the perspective of several characters. Each of these characters experience a form of racism and feeling less valuable than white people; how the characters are presented at the end of the novel result from this experience. Morrison also includes the character’s reactions, and how they handle the situation they’re in. Characters that are more impacted by racism, like Mrs. Breedlove and Pecola, develop a hatred for…

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    “...Sethe was licked, tasted, eaten by Beloved’s eyes.” (Morrison 68) This example of metaphorical cannibalism depicts the bottomless hunger that Beloved feels for Sethe. Throughout Beloved, Toni Morrison embeds the motif of hunger to develop a juxtaposition: Consumption nourishes and allows the establishment of connections; however, it can become a lethal obsession. Including the hunger of the characters in 124 unravels their emotional pain and emphasizes the psychological traumas they endure.…

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    Toni Morrison is a black African-American novelist of 20th C whose novels show and record a brief history of African-Americans of the early times of the 19thC. She became the first African-American to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993. Toni Morrison shows us the troublesome circumstances within which the slaves were forced to live, the dark aspects of humanity, and the destructions that are delivered to their lives through her novels. She has attempted to show the past of slavery,…

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    Bias In The Bluest Eye

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    white. When asked which doll was more beautiful, most of the kindergarteners pointed to the white one. Through this study, it was evident how a society that glorifies whiteness and puts down color manifests itself into the minds of youth. Similarly, Toni Morrison’s novel, The Bluest Eye…

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    Ugliness Was Unique”: An African American Literary Examination of Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye Does being ugly refer to the physical aspects of a person, the way they think, the color of their skin, or the way in which one is raised? Toni Morrison, an African American novelist, originally named Chloe Anthony Wofford, interprets and examines the “black experience” throughout her many novels (http://www.britannica.com/Toni-Morrison). The Bluest Eye, being one of them, is a remarkable novel…

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    The Bluest Eye and why it needed to be so messed up Toni Morrison is known for her unique style of writing. Her raw and unforgiving style lends itself to speaking about topics that are hard to understand the deep nature of. She has a way of speaking to an audience that few other authors have. In The Bluest Eye she uses this style of writing to convey the harsh reality faced by black girls in the 1940s. Pecola in particular has a miserable life which can only be fully understood through…

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    “Recitatif” is Toni Morrison’s, an African American author, first and only published short story. This particular short story was fiction. In 1983, William Morrow Publishing in New York City published and released this short story. Toni Morrison had husband and wife, Imamu Amiri Baraka and Amina Baraka edit and review “Recitatif” before having it published. Morrison was born in 1931, making her 52 years old when “Recitatif” was published. Toni Morrison was a well educated woman who when to two…

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    Racism In The Bluest Eye

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    Set in the 1940’s, Toni Morrison’s novel “The Bluest Eye” is a tale of Pecola, a young Negro girl shunned by society for being ugly due to her skin colour and appearance. Morrison explores life in America during the late 60s and early 70s in which American culture was influenced predominantly by the white race. Using a creative approach, Toni Morrison explores the white ideal that the Negro population strives to attain to shed light on an arguably different kind of racism. Through the use of…

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    The Bluest Eye Metaphors

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    “The Bluest Eyes”, written by Toni Morrison, is a novel about young African American girls as they struggle with self identification and self love. This story talks about their constant battles with society's standards, and how they must overcome different forms of adversity. Throughout the novel there is the constant theme of beauty, and how beauty plays a major role on the lives of those young girls. Beauty, and its many different effects on people's’ lives can be seen through literary…

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    Morrison's Speech

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    (Middleton 64 ). In 1993, Morrison became the first African-American women to receive a Nobel Prize in Literature award and in her acceptance speech The Nobel Lecture in Literature she decided to retell a story, a fable heard in many cultures around the world ( The Nobel Lecture in Literature 198 ). The story is about a wise old woman, a rural prophet where fame extends beyond her community and to the city where her legend is the source of amusement ( NLL 198 ). In the speech, Morrison claims…

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