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Identity In The Bluest Eye

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To capture an event and immortalize it. The perfect way to show others the truth, to make them understand. Stories can be redeeming, adventurous, beautiful, but one can never rest comfortably in any one version of what happens. Stories are as likely to distort the truth as they are to reveal it. Our perception can be blurred by the pain being felt or clouded by the love being shared. Everyone wishes to live out a fairytale ending, but what if the story doesn’t have a happy ending? What if the immortalized moments are the ones that need to be forgotten? In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, the theme that love and racial identity are attached to one being perceived as beautiful leads to a destructive and poisonous overemphasis on beauty.
Clean, pure, innocent, blond hair, blue eyes, the ideal white beauty. Desperate …show more content…

Fulfillment of a wish may be even more tragic than the wish impulse itself, the wish to see things as differently as one wants to be seen. The connection between how one is seen and what one sees has a uniquely tragic outcome for Pecola. She is a symbol of the black community’s self-hatred and belief in their own ugliness. Because she is black she may have a chance at being loved, but because she is a scapegoat and must carry all of their problems, she destroys herself and can redeem no chance at being loved. Her ugliness makes them feel beautiful. Her suffering makes them feel lucky. Her internalization of their self-hatred being forced upon her pushes her to the brink of insanity. Forced furthur and furthur into her fantasy world, which is her only defense against the pain, Pecola uses that pain to escape reality and make herself disappear. She goes mad believing that her wish has been granted and she has blue eyes, but her fate is far worse than death as she is offered no release. Pecola’s wandering at the edge of town haunts the community, reminding them of the ugliness and hatred they’ve tried to

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