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The Bluest Eye Chapter 3 Summary

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The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison is an incredible book that helps the describe what it was like to be an African American when Toni was younger, more than that what it was like to be an African American girl in that time period. Chapter 3, is an incredibly important part of the book, because I feel that it introduces the main plot of the story, the ugliness of the Breedloves. Their ugliness is one of the main mysteries of the story and is why I feel this chapter is so important. When the narrator calls the Breedloves ugly it isn’t pertaining to their physical attributes but rather says it seemed “as though some mysterious all-knowing master had said, “You are ugly people.” . . . and they took the ugliness in their hands, threw it as a mantle …show more content…

Then it goes on to a setting where Mrs. Breedlove wakes up early in the morning and goes directly into the kitchen and begins to stir and create lots of noise. Pecola is awake but still lying in bed and knows that her mother will pick a fight with her father, like she always does after he came home drunk the night before. Each of Cholly’s drunken nights end with a fight with Mrs. Breedlove. Mrs. Breedlove comes into the room to try and wake up Cholly to fetch her some coal for the stove. He refuses, and she says that if she sneezes just once from fetching the coal outside, he is in trouble. Then Mrs. Breedlove sneezes and pours water on Cholly’s head and they begin to physically fight. The narrator then talks how Mrs. Breedlove and Cholly need each other. She needs him to reinforce her identity as a martyr or believer and to give meaning to what otherwise would be a dreary life, and he needs to take out anger and hurt upon her, because of his unreasonable anger towards women as a result of his past with the two hunters and his first sexual partner. When the narrator says it seemed “as though some mysterious all-knowing master had said, “You are ugly people.” . . . and they took the ugliness in their hands, threw it as a mantle over them, and went about the world with it.”(p.) …show more content…

Pecola wants blue eyes for a couple of reasons. One is so that she can change what she sees, and so that she can change how others see her. As for what she sees she wants to change how she sees her family with her drunken abusive father, martyrdom mother and her antagonist run away brother. And obviously she wants to change the way people see her because she connects the way she looks with the way she is treated. I see these reasons as interchangeable because she believes that what she sees (hurtful behavior) are created by how people see her (as ugly). Her brother use the option of running away from the horrific domestic violence scenes that their mother and father participate in. Pecola doesn’t have this choice because of her age. So instead she begins to believe that she can only change what she sees by changing herself. Moments like this are when she is lying in her bed after her parents have their fight and she begins to imagine that her body is disappearing fully until she is, figuratively, only left with her eyes which in her opinion is the source of her ugliness. There are moments when she succeeds in separating connection between what she sees and how people see her. When she considers that dandelions might be beautiful, she recognizes that beauty can be created by seeing instead of by being seen. Through

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