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Symbolism In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

Decent Essays

Toni Morrison wrote The Bluest Eye in order to discuss race, gender, and class. She does a careful and intentional dance along the axis of oppression she is speaking on. Her pointed stories of abuse, self loathing, and rape are juxtaposed to the soft imagery of nature. The book is separated into four sections named after the seasons. Rarely does a page go by where Morrison does not wax poetic about marigolds, or set a scene with forsythia. And yet, though she uses these images to soften the setting in which atrocities take place, they are often used in such a manner that the harshness of the events bleed into the imagery. Creating the malevolent force that is nature in the novel, and the streak of ironic imagery that runs through Morrisons writing. Seasons are cyclical. They change consistently and will do so forever. There is no final autumn, no winter that is not followed by yet another spring. In The Bluest Eye pain is also cyclical. The racism experienced by cholly transfers into a hatred of the women in his life explained by morrison when she says “he cultivated his hatred of darlene...he was…to …show more content…

Instead of allowing that to be a lense to see the text, morrison subverts the connotations of seasons. She shows not the ups and downs of life but the cyclical quality of oppression that once started is passed around from rich white man to poor black man, from poor black man to poor black woman, from poor black woman to her poor black child. This is most clear during the section titled spring which opens with frieda’s molestation and continues by describing the history of Mrs. breedlove and cholly. The contrast between forsythia, milkweed, wild roses, and molestation and abuse magnifies the severity of the horrible events through Toni Morrison use of

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