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Racism In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

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Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eye is a harsh look on past and present aspects of racism in a time that many people now do not recall. It touches on subjects such as the public humiliation that being black seemingly deserved, not only from children, but the ridicule and judgement that black people faced from adults who should have known better. Comparatively, The Bluest Eye also emphasizes the mindset that the lighter someone’s skin is, the more beautiful they are, which is shown though the way mixed people in the novel are more accepted and loved by others, simply for their lighter skin, even by the narrators. Because of this harsh discrimination and the European beauty standards that are still in place today, Pecola’s fate was destined from the beginning. Pecola Breedlove is simply a little girl who wants to be beautiful in a world that refuses to see her as such and treats her with the utmost disrespect, the physical and mental abuse driving her to the point of insanity. Through the various technical facets of Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, Morrison attempts to not only humanize her characters in the eyes of her readers through the use of switching perspective, but to allow her audience to truly empathize with them by shifting the narration from third to first person, and putting a twist on the literary symbolism that seasons have been used for in past works. The first way that Morrison incites empathy for her characters is through switching the perspective that the

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