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Gender In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye And Maxine Hong Kingston

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Gender is most commonly referred to as the state of being male or female. The gender ascribed to a child at birth determines the role that they are expected to assume within society and society’s perception of them. Meanwhile, the term ethnicity is most commonly understood to be the categorisation of people along lines of common heritage and shared national or cultural tradition. The interplay between gender and ethnicity is heavily determined by the cultural context individuals find themselves in as both concepts are fluid and have no fixed state. Toni Morrison, author of ‘The Bluest Eye’ and Maxine Hong Kingston, author of ‘The Woman Warrior’ both explore the intersectionality of gender and ethnicity and how these classifications help: shape ideas of masculinity, determine the role of women within society, dictate ideas of beauty and how ideas of gender and ethnicity are influenced by American ideals.
The notion of black masculinity has historically been associated with violence. Yet, in ‘The Bluest Eye’ Morrison interrogates the underlying reasons for this connection through providing a back story to black masculine violence. Morrison is concerned in her novel with reflecting the experiences of African Americans in 1940s Ohio. The reality of life for black Americans in 1940s Ohio was that they had to contend with the ordeal of life under both de jure and de facto segregation. In Ohio it was commonplace for businesses to have ‘separate areas for whites and African

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